Presentamos una galería especial del fotógrafo canadiense Larry Towell.
Menonnites
MEXICO. La Batea. Zacatecas. 1994. Mennonites.
CANADA. Ontario. Essex County. 1993.
CANADA. Ontario. 1993. Lambton County.
CANADA. Ontario. Lambton County. 1992. The Reddekop girls preparing their hair on Saturday afternoon. Old Colony Mennonite girls and women braid their hair on Saturday. The family is originally from the La Batea Colony, Zacatecas, Mexico.
CANADA. Ontario. Lambton County. 1995. Peter, Susanna and Benjamin Peters in the spring wheat.
CANADA. Ontario. 1998. Haldinard- Norfolk county. Mennonites.
CANADA. Ontario. 1995. Haldimard-Norfolk County. Mennonites.
MEXICO. Durango Colony. 1998. Durango. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1996. Durango Colony. Durango. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1994. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonites.
MEXICO. Capulin. Chihuahua. Mennonites. 1996.
MEXICO. 1994. Durango Colony. Durango. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1994. Durango Colony. Durango. Mennonites.
MEXICO. Durango. 1998. Durango Colony. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1992. Chihuahua. Casas Grandes Colonies. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1999. Temporal Campeche. Mennonites. 1999.
CANADA. Ontario. 1996. Kent County. Mennonite.
MEXICO. Chihuaha. Cuervo Casas Grandes. Mennonites. 1992.
Chihuahua. 1997. Cuervo Casas Colonies. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1992. Chihuahua. Cuauhtemoc Colonies. Mennonites.
MEXICO. Zacatecas. La Batea. 1992. Child rests her head on the kitchen table. Many Mennonite families have left Mexico in search of seasonal employment in North America.
Chihuahua. 1997. Cuervo Casas Colonies. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1996. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonite Farmland.
MEXICO. Chihuahua. 1999. Capulin. Casas Grandes Colonies. Mennonites.
MEXICO. Cuauhtemoc Colonies. Chihuahua. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1994. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1996. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonite Farmland.
MEXICO. 1996. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonites.
MEXICO. Chihuahua. 1997. Cuauhtemoc Colonies. Mennonite Farmland.
MEXICO. 1994. Manuel Colony. Tamaulipas. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1994. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonite.
MEXICO. Durango. 1998. Durango Colony. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1992. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1998. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1999. Yalnun Campeche. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1998. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonites.
MEXICO. La Batea, Zacatecas. 1992. Mennonite girl sitting at a table.
MEXICO. La Batea Colony, Zacatecas. 1992. Jacob Dyck’s wife sewing with her daughter Katarina at her knees. Many Mennonites have left Mexico due to poverty in hopes of finding seasonal farm in North America.
MEXICO. Durango. Young Mennonite women fleeing a cloud of dust. 1994.
MEXICO. 1994. Durango Colony. Durango. Mennonites.
MEXICO. 1996. La Batea. Zacatecas. Mennonite Farmland.
MEXICO. Durango. 1998. Durango Colony. Mennonite.
MEXICO. Chihuahua. 1999. Capulin Casas Grandes. Mennonites.
MEXICO. Chihuahua. 1999. Capulin Casas Grandes. Mennonites.
El Salvador
EL SALVADOR. Perquin, Morazan. A dog is seen through the photographer’s eyeglasses. Perquin was one of the two «guerilla capitals» during the war. FMLN combatants were often seen lounging around the village during the day. In the evenings, they came into town to meet friends. The town was badly marred by fighting, and graffiti in support of the FMLN guerillas was seen on many neighbourhood buldings, many of which were adobe or adobe covered with cement. The peace accords were signed in January 1992 ending 12 years of civil war. Stone covered the streets and the hills were too poor to grow good crops. The best land lay in the south and was in the hands of the country’s landed elite, the 14 families who controlled most of El Salvador’s arable land. 1991.
San Jose las Flores, Chalatenango. 1995. San Jose las Flores was the other «guerilla capital» during the 12-year-old civil war. The Catholic church in the background began to crumble and collapse during the war due to government bombing campaigns that destroyed its foundation by shaking the earth. The two children, whose family’s annual income would not have exceeded $200, were playing with dolls in front of the church. Catholic church members and leadership also suffered government repression throughout the war due to their support of Vatican II and Puebla Conference-inspired human rights and social justice issues. Some churches in Central America became government targets. In the early years of the war Archbishop Oscar Romero, an outspoken advocate of the poor, was assassinated while saying mass by government death squads .(Page 26-27) ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
San Salvador. 1989. Shadows of civilians descending a hill after viewing the corpses of dead guerrillas put on display by government soldiers.
EL SALVADOR. Perquin. Morazan. The One-time capital of the FMLN (Farabundo Marti National Liberation Forces). Now mostly deserted.
EL SALVADOR. San Salvador. 1992. Woman with blanket in the General Cemetery on All Saint’s Day, the day families remember their dead and picnic on the graves of deceased relatives. El Salvador is a Roman Catholic country, the only country in the world to be named after the Christian Savior with its villages and towns named after the saints. (El Salvador, page 48-49) ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
EL SALVADOR. El Barillo. A government Army maneuver near Guazapa Mountain. Guazapa was a guerilla stronghold throughout the war. The woman in the stream is a recently returned refugee defied the army and returned to El Barillo after being driven out by the Army a few years earlier. The photographer was on an army maneuver with soldiers when the woman saw soldiers approaching and threw a towel over herself. Water is carried from the streams to homes for cooking and washing. At the time, there were no permanent houses in El Barillo. 1986.
San Salvador. 1991. During the presidential election campaign, a woman and her child squat between TV cameras and the Salvadorean National Police as they attempt to thwart an anti-ARENA demonstration of students and labor unionists along Roosevelt Avenue. ARENA is El Salvador’s most right wing party. An airforce helicopter hoovers overhead. A year later the peace accords were signed in Mexico City ending 12 years of civil war. The media are often targeted by government forces. Many newspaper, TV and radio offices had been targeted throughout the wars in Central America for reporting anti-government news. (El Salvador, page 50) ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
San Salvador. 1989. Government soldiers disembark from an armoured personnel carrier in the wealthy suburb of Escalon. Guerillas had taken over a number of houses there during the November Offensive. Here, government forces assisted wealthy residents to evacuate before shelling started. This demonstrated a major difference in the way the government treated rich and poor residents. In poor neighborhoods, many civilians were shot if they were in the way.
San Salvador. 1989. A dead civilian woman lies on a sidewalk. She had probably been shot for breaking the 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew. In the background, government soldiers move forward to drive guerillas from the capital. Government straffing from the air, armoured personnel carriers, and then foot soldiers eventually drove the FMLN guerillas out.
EL SALVADOR. San Salvador. Two guerilla women inside emergency clinic set up to treat the wounded inside San Salvador during the November 1989 offensive. Women made up a large part of the guerilla fighting force. The fighting broke out on November 16, 1989, when an estimated 5000 guerillas showed up in the capital city and launched attacks from three sides, almost encircling the capital. The offensive was launched to push the government back to the bargaining table. In January 1992, the peace accords were finally signed ending 12 years of civil war in which 70,000 died. 1989.
Guarjila, Chalatenago. 1991. Dead guerilla lays in coffin looked upon by fellow combatants (women) following fighting in rural village of Guarjila. The by a tin roof. Civilians surround the combatants who support them. In the months before signing of the peace accords, fighting intensified as the government and guerillas attempted to gain bargaining chips. Women and children mixed in the guerilla ranks.
EL SALVADOR. San Jose las Flores, Chalatenango. FMLN guerillas rest after a day of fighting government soldiers in the cobblestone guerilla village of San Jose las Flores. Although FMLN guerillas usually fought with U.S.-made M-16s captured from the army, an Eastern European AKA leans against the post. Central America was an open market for guns throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Poverty remained the main reason for the conflict. 1991.
EL SALVADOR. 1992.
San Salvador. 1995. Former government soldier learning to cane chairs after the war. Many soldiers lost their feet to homemade landmines laid by guerillas, often made from nitrogen in imported fertilizer. The 12 year civil war left several thousand soldiers without feet. A homemade landmine would normally maim, while the U.S.-made Claymore landmines used by government forces against geurillas usually killed the person who tripped it. The brief «job-training» after the war was inadequate to help the maimed to find meaningful work again. Most of the government soldiers had been forcibly conscripted. Most were themselves, rural peasants. After the war, disabled guerillas and government soldiers united to lobby for more government aid for ex-combatants.
San Salvador. 1995. Centro de Rehabilitacion Profesional de la Fuerza Armada. Ex-government soldier playing soccer during re-habilitation. There are 17,000 incapacitated ex-combatants in El Salvador. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
EL SALVADOR. San Salvador. Ex-government soldier learns to make wheel chairs for his fellow ex-combatants. 1992
EL SALVADOR. San Salvador. 1991. A daughter comforts her mother who passed out while grieving at the grave of her son who was killed by government death squads. Some 70,000 persons died in the 12-year civil war.
EL SALVADOR. San Salvador. 1988. Many families, displaced by fighting and poverty during the war, squatted where they could find land. In San Salvador’s General Cemetery and along it’s edge, lived dozens of such families, represented here by three generations. On this «Day Of The Dead», family members remember their dead and picnic on the graves of deceased relatives. El Salvador is a Roman Catholic country, the only country in the world to be named after the Christian Savior with its villages and towns named after Catholic saints.
Afganistán
AFGHANISTAN. 2008. Shomoli Plain. Ruins. Village region north of Kabul destroyed in the line of fire between Russian troops and the Mujahadeen, then the Northern Alliance and the Taliban. Afghanistan has known only invasion and civil war for the past 30 years.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. May, 2009. A shepherd and his flock amid ruins. Much of Kabul was destroyed in the line of fire between various factions of the Mujahideen before the Taliban was able to gain power.
AFGHANISTAN. Baghe Qazi. May, 2009. An Afghani shepherd and his flock amid ruined Russian military vehicles at a destroyed former Soviet base near Kabul.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. 2011. Ruins of former Russian military base.
AFGHANISTAN. Baghe Qazi. May, 2009. A destroyed former Soviet base near Kabul.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. May, 2009. Two million Afghanis died in the war against the Russians. Millions were maimed and wounded leaving the family wage earner incapacitated. Disabled Mujahideen fighters assemble for a political rally celebrating the anniversary of the Russian departure from Afghanistan.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. 2010. Boy being fitted with new prosthetic leg at the International Committee of the Red Cross treatment center. Most doctors and workshop employees are landmine victims.
AFGHANISTAN. 2009.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. May, 2009. Heroin addict living at the former Russian Compound, a derelict and abandoned set of partially destroyed buildings once used as a Russian cultural center. The Russian compound is also part of the former frontline between various Mujahideen factions in a previous war. Currently used as opium den. The ex-Mujahideen fighter had lost his hands in a previous war.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. 2011. Child peers into ICRC (International Committee Of The Red Cross) vehicle during home visits to landmine victims and pediatric patients.
AFGHANISTAN. 2008. Tashquran village, Hilltop. Woman in burqua amid ruins. Village destroyed in the line of fire between Russian troops and the Mujahadeen, Afghanistan has known only invasion and civil war for the past 30 years.
AFGHANISTAN. Mazar-e-Sharif. 2009. Beggar.
AFGHANISTAN. Murad Khani, Kabul. 2008. Street scene. Old City of Kabul.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. 2009. Buzkashi, or «goat grabbing» is a traditional Central Asian team sport played on horseback by skilled riders who grab a headless goat or calf from the ground while riding a horse at full gallop. The goal is to grab the carcass, get it clear of the other players, and pitch it into a target circle.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. 2010. Kunar Valley. A US soldier in gunners turret of Mine resistant vehicle (MRAP).
AFGHANISTAN. Kandahar. 2011. ANA (Afghan national army) soldier wounded in Taliban attack being carried in Black Hawk MEDEVAC helicopter by Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 52nd Aviation Regiment, sub-unit TF (Task Force) LIFT.
AFGHANISTAN. Winter 2009. Kunar Province. Afghan National Army (ANA) recruits in training by US soldiers at Forward Operating Base (FOB) Bostick. The most northern of US military bases and the most active area for insurgent attacks is seldom visited by journalists. Its 3rd Batallion, 61st Cavalry regiment recently lost 8 soldiers at the nearby Observation Post (OP) Keating, which is now closed down. The Swat Valley of Pakistan is directly across the mountains.
AFGHANISTAN. Kabul. 2010. Village elder and daughter at ÒjirgaÓ over canal construction with US military Black Knight Troop in Kunar Valley.
From my Front Porch
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1995. Noah TOWELL, who has a fever, laying in an uninstalled basement window well in the spring season. His dog Banjo is barking. Two cats and Isaac’s playpen are on the front porch of the farmhouse.
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1999. Ann TOWELL asleep in a tent during summer camping in Pinery Provincial Park. Families often go camping in the summer. Hair braids are beautiful. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1996. Shadow of the photographer and his dog on the front porch of the farmhouse on his 75-acre farm. The house was originally built in the 1850s by pioneer land surveyer Samuel Smith.
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1993. Ann TOWELL kissing Noah TOWELL on the kitchen table when the western sun comes into the only window that faces the setting sun. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1996. Naomi TOWELL carries her two-year-old brother home after swimming with him in the river rapids of the Sydenham River, a tributary of the Great Lakes that drains part of southwestern Ontario. Families swim in creeks, rivers and ponds to cool off in the summer time. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1992. A child lays on her back on a frozen pond while skating with her neighbours (the TOWELL children) and their dog (Banjo). ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1992. The photographer’s brother-in-law Mike DEBOEKKER puts his nose in the pond at Larry TOWELL’s parents’ home to attract the fish which rise to the surface in search of food. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1995. Naomi TOWELL swings out over the Sydenham River on a rope suspended from a maple tree. Her brothers Moses (left), Noah (right), and Isaac (rear) look on. The rope is in a very small park near their home. The river also flows by their house. The family had ridden bicycles to «Shetland Park» on a Sunday afternoon, stopping to visit the ELLIOT family on the way home. The ELLIOTS find the river to be too dirty to swim in and have an above ground swimming pool. The photographer grew up on the Sydenham River and has swam in it all his life believing that the river is clean enough for swimming. A little dirt never hurt anyone. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1995. The dog Banjo faces off with Capernicus the raccoon while the TOWELL children swim in front of their house. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1994. Cows look on young Isaac TOWELL who sits in a laundry basket while his mother hangs clothes on the line to dry. Cows make good but curios neighbours. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1996. Two brothers, Isaac (left) and Noah (right) TOWELL, play «fort» in a stand of sumac trees. Sumac is a red berry often used in pioneer days to make spring tonic. Siblings play with each other in the summer as they are often too far from schoolmates to visit. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1990. Neighbor Sarah LEWIS pulls Naomi TOWELL in a homemade chidlren’s wagon with her dog along the township road. Most rural people have a dog for company, a family pet, and to an extent for security. They bark at night if strangers are around. Sinbad is the dog’s name.
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1997. Ann TOWELL with an armful of new born kittens stands by the front porch. Behind her are the stone pillars built by Larry TOWELL from found river stones. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1997. Moses (back), Noah (centre), and Isaac (bottom) TOWELL stand on the road that runs in front of their home in rural Ontario. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1992. Moses, Noah and Naomi TOWELL skating on the pond behind the house with Banjo and the cat. The chair was used by Noah to lean on when he learned to skate. The pond used to be a shallow gravel pit from which stones were sold many years ago to the rural township for its roads. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1993. Noah TOWELL, using a DIANA camera, pretends he is taking pictures of his dog Banjo at the entrance of the cornfield along the gravel road. We had planted acres of black walnut trees on the hill slopes a couple of years earlier to stop soil erosion. I often went there to examine the trees. The hill is sandy and there is no winter to spring ground cover to hold the earth. Banjo was a year old and had come from the dog pound as an abandoned puppy. She is a mutt, not a purebred anything. Good farm dog stock. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1990. Naomi TOWELL, left, and neighbor Sarah LEWIS feed cows from a bucket of corn in the pasture beside the photographer’s house. The farm is locally known as «Smith’s Falls», named after pioneer land surveyor Samuel Smith. The cows wander up to the house as they graze and you can see them in the early morning outside the kitchen window. Flies are buzzing around their heads. Their ear tags identify them for the local beef farmer, who, at any rate, knows them by name without their tags. He says they each have their own distinct personality. I have noticed this as well.
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1992. Ann TOWELL is seen through the windshield of the car standing in front of the house. I had just installed two used cedar windows in the bedroom. They were handmade and were free. In the winter of 1995/96 we tore off the old cedar siding and replaced it with pine. I painted flowers on the new window trim. The house was built about 100 years ago by pioneer land surveyor Samuel Smith. He was working for the British Crown carving the land into townships. Local Indians knew at the time what was happening but could do nothing. On the farm there are 3 Indian village sites and a native burial ground that were covered with soybeans when we moved in. They are now in black locust trees and gardens that I planted. Naomi is in the right hand corner of the frame. She always jumps into the car when I get home. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1998. Four-year-old Isaac TOWELL plays on a small swing built by his father on the stairway leading down to the river. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1992. Naomi, Moses and Noah TOWELL play in a snowstorm at home. Noah is sitting in a toboggan as the children are just returning from tobogganing. Naomi is in the doorway of the woodworking shop attached to the house. The wood pile against the house wall was cut by the photographer for burning in his woodstove during the winter. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. Two-year-old Isaac TOWELL is carried into the Sydenham River by his older sister Naomi to introduce him to water. 1996.
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1992. Naomi TOWELL stands by the window inside of the abandoned farmhouse that is just down the road from our home. It is on the eastern edge of the farm. From the pioneer cemetery on the small knoll in the field across from the house, one can see the remains of four farms. Fifty years ago, this part of rural Ontario was heavily populated. Sparce human landscape remains. Naomi and I often come into this house to explore. My earliest pictures were taken of my sisters in abandoned houses who were about her age in this picture. If one is not carefull you will fall through the floor which has rotten away from the rain. Our nearest neighbours live two miles away. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1995. After his friend shaved his head, Moses TOWELL lies on a hand crocheted bedspread that his mother Ann made. His bedroom window faces the south pasture. You can hear the cows in the morning grazing by the window, or at night, moving in a herd. Moses shaved his head as it was the style at the time. Even country boys can be in style. Moses went away to camp this summer, bald head and all.
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1994. Isaac TOWELL in the fourth month of his history in the queen ann’s lace wildflowers down the road from his house. The queen ann’s lace is also known as «wild carrot» for the stalk’s distinct flavor and smell. It grows wild throughout the countryside and farmers consider it to be a «weed.» Isaac is wearing a bonnet made by his mother Ann out of yellow cotton, and he is a few yards from the site of an ancient native Canadian indian village that is in the process of being excavated by local archaeologist David RIDELL. Isaac’s house is approximately 100 year’s old and was built by pioneer land surveyor Samuel SMITH. The house is located about 100 yards from a set of river rapids locally known as «Smith’s Falls» from which the farm gets its name. ©Larry Towell/Magnum Photos
CANADA. Lambton County, Ontario. 1990. Naomi TOWELL with her cat in a hollow black locust tree.
Larry Towell
Por Óscar Colorado Nates*
(Canadá, 1953-)
Músico y poeta, se hizo fotógrafo freelance en 1984. Entre sus primeros proyectos se encuentran la guerra de los Contras en Nicaragua y la guerra civil en El Salvador. Realizó también ensayos sobre el derrame del Exxon Valdez.
Larry Towell fue el primer fotógrafo canadiense en formar parte de la agencia Magnum Photos. Ha trabajado en El Salvador, Palestina, Guatemala, Líbano, Nicaragua, Vietnam, Afganistán, México y su propio país.
Ha sido distinguido con más de 25 premios y fotográficos entre los que se cuentan más importantes del mundo: The Hasselblad Award, World Press Photo y The Alfred Eisenstaedt Award, Oskar Barnack Awar, W. Eugene Smith Foundation Award, Ernst Haas Foundation Award, entre otros.
Towell creció en una familia rural en Ontario. Estudió en la York University en Toronto, donde comenzó su interés en la fotografía. Luego se hizo voluntario para colaborar en Calcuta y ahí comenzó a inquietarse por la distribución de la riqueza, la posesión y desposesión de la tierra.
Trabaja con película analógica y siempre en blanco y negro. Es un creador que se ha aproximado a la multimedia.
Entre sus libros destcan El Salvador (1997), The Mennonites (2000), No Man’s Land (2005) y The World From My Front Porch (2008).
La obra de Towell es de un gran cuidado en lo compositivo, siempre atento al instante decisivo. En su trabajo se puede sentir la intimidad con el sujeto y una gran capacidad para empatizar; entra a las casas, se relaciona con las familias y eso se nota en sus fotos. Por esta razón el observador conecta inmediatamente con estos ambientes íntimos, y al mismo tiempo se siente en choque cuando, por ejemplo, en El Salvador la guerra llega, destruye, mata o mutila. Towell nos brinda una familiaridad con sus motivos que amplifican el drama cuando algo terrible ocurre en estas comunidades.
Larry Towell vive en Ontario (Lambton County) y tiene una granja junto con su esposa con quien ha procreado cuatro hijos.
* Óscar Colorado Nates es crítico, analista y promotor de la fotografía.
Titular de la Cátedra de Fotografía Avanzada en la Universidad Panamericana (Ciudad de México).
Autor de libros como Fotografía 3.0; El Mejor Fotógrafo del Mundo o Instagram, el ojo del mundo, entre otros.
Comunicador transmedia: conductor de radio, columnista en el periódico El Universal (Cd. de México).
Co-fundador de la Sociedad Mexicana de Daguerrotipia y miembro de The Photographic Historical Society (Rochester, NY).
Las opiniones vertidas en los artículos y producciones audio-visuales son personales.
© 2017 by Óscar Colorado Nates. Todos los Derechos Reservados. Esta publicación se realiza sin fines de lucro y con fines de investigación, enseñanza y/o crítica académica, artística y científica.
Referencias de investigación
Información legal: Todas las fotografías se presentan sin fines de lucro y con propósitos de enseñanza e investigación científica bajo lo previsto en la legislación vigente por conducto de los tratados internacionales en materia de derechos de autor. Consulte en este enlace el aviso legal respecto del uso de imágenes fijas, video y audio en este sitio. Los íconos utilizados en este sitio son cortesía de www.flaticon.com
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A Larry Towell lo desconocía por completo. GRACIAS por mostrar y compartir. Saludos!!
De nada Ernesto, siempre es un placer compartir el trabajo de aquellos fotógrafos que me llaman la atención. ¡Un abrazo fuerte!
Gracias Oscar!! por compartir el trabajo de este excelente fotógrafo que antes no conocía…Saludos.
Qué bueno que te ha gustado, Armando. Siempre es un gusto compartir estos grandes fotógrafos que son menos conocidos pero cuyos méritos los ponen entre las grandes miradas. ¡Saludos!
¡Excelentes fotografías! No conocía a Larry Towell y realmente me ha encantado.
Muchas gracias, Óscar. Un saludo
Alberto, qué bueno que hayas descubierto por este medio a un fotógrafo tan interesante como Towell. ¡Gracias por siempre estar al pendiente!
Descubrimos muchísima información interesante en tu blog. ¡Infinitas gracias!
Nunca es tarde para descubrir lo valioso!……viendo un video del fotógrafo Rodrigo Abd, menciona a Larry Towell y por carácter transitivo dispara mi interés por conocerlo. Ahí me salta en primer término el sito de Óscar en Fotos……y otra vez aquí! Contento por el hallazgo de este excelente fotógrafo, reitero una vez más mi agradecimiento por este empeño en acercarnos lo mejor de la fotografía. Saludos