Celebrating Lourdes Grobet. Laboratorio de Teatro Campesino

As part of the homage to Mexican photographer Lourdes Grobet, join us for a Pop Up photo exhibit of some of the iconic photographs included in the book, Laboratorio de Teatro Campesino e Indígena, medio siglo de historia (Indigenous and Country Theatre Laboratory. Half a Century of History, 2022), a book she developed and photographed for over 30 years and was completed before her passing. We will have a closing reception with Grobet’s daughter and son, Ximena and Juan Cristóbal Pérez Grobet. They will share insight into their mother’s creative process and their experience as collaborators on the project.

About the Book

The Laboratorio de Teatro Campesino e Indígena: A Half Century of History, from Lourdes Grobet, is a book that maps the trajectory and experiences of a communitarian, mass, indigenous and rural theatre, operating across Mexico since 1983, and a posthumous homage to its founder, María Alicia Martínez Medrano. In accordance with its beginnings and objectives, the LTCI has offered to many marginalized communities, the instruments to develop, value and enjoy their own artistic language, traditions, theatricality and the integration of their rituals into this language with a profound sense of dignity. This volume traces the group’s history through critical essays alongside photos by Lourdes Grobet.

Arles 2023 Historical Book Award Winner. 

Published by Editorial RM

Lourdes Grobet (1940-2022) was born in Mexico City and studied visual arts under the mentorship of Mathias Goeritz, Kati Horna, and Gilberto Aceves Navarro. Grobet eventually discovered photography and started experimenting with the medium, which eventually led her to study graphics and photography at the Cardiff College of Art in Wales. Upon her return to Mexico in the late 1970s and following her drive to work from a community-based perspective, Grobet joined collectives such as Club Fotográfico de México (Mexican Photography Club), Grupo Proceso Pentágono and the Consejo Mexicano de Fotografía (Mexican Photography Council). One of the photographer’s most distinctive projects was capturing lucha libre (freestyle wrestling), including iconic wrestler El Santo. Grobet also created in theater, film, and video and that work can be found in collections and museums such as the Museum of Contemporary Art in Mexico City and the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris.

This event is presented in partnership with NYU/ Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies with additional promotional support by Grupo Miztli

Event information

Date: Monday, November 20th, 2023

Time: 8:15 pm

Venue: King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center on NYU Campus

Address: 53 Washington Square S, New York, NY 10012

Map and Directions

Tickets: Free with RSVP

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