Casasola Archive

{{Short description|Mexican Culture Archive}}

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The Casasola Archive is a photographic archive of Mexican history and culture, the foundational collection of the photo archive, Fototeca Nacional, administered by the Mexican government. The archive contains important historical photos from the regime of Porfirio Diaz and the Mexican Revolution. The main collection was compiled by Agustín Víctor Casasola, a photo journalist in Mexico City. The archive contains his own work as well as that of some 500 other photographers, with both positive prints and negative films, in various formats and on various photographic media. Since 1976, it is preserved in the climate-controlled rooms in a former colonial-era Franciscan convent, now the National Photo Library, of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) in Pachuca, Hidalgo, Mexico. The building houses the photographic archive and has exhibition spaces. The photo library currently gathers images in 39 sections, with a total of 850,000 items (positive and negative).Arroyo, Sergio Raúl. "The Casasola Collection in the INAH National Photo Library", in Mexico: The Revolution and Beyond, Photographs by Agustín Victor Casasola 1900–1940. New York: Aperture Foundation 2003, p. 13.

History

Agustín Víctor Casasola (1874–1938) and his brother Miguel (1876–1951) were pioneers of photo reportage. From their photos of the Mexican Revolution, where they sold the prints but retained the negatives, the archive was begun by Agustín Victor and carried forward by his children Gustavo (1900–1982), Agustín (1901–1980),Ismael (1902–1964), Dolores (1907–2001), Piedad (1909–1953) and Mario (1923–1988). Other photographers’ works that are part of the collection include Guillermo Kahlo, (father of Frida Kahlo), Hugo Brehme, Manuel Ramos, Eduardo Salmerón, Samuel Tinoco, and F.L. Clarke.Arrroyo, "The Casasola Collection" p. 11.

The collection is heavily weighted toward images in Mexico City, where the family was based, and with many photographs of politicians and political events, but there are also many scenes of everyday life, including scenes of industry, transportation, urbanization, crime, advertising, sports, arts, entertainment and portraits of the inhabitants of the capital.

Until 1975, the archive was held by the Casasola family. With the possibility of its being sold and sent out of the country, the Mexican government purchased the collection, seeing it as an important part of its cultural patrimony. The administrator of the archive is the National Institute of Anthropology and History, in the INAH National Photo Library.Arroyo, "The Casasola Collection", p. 11. The former colonial-era convent of San Francisco in Pachuca, Hidalgo was renovated for climate control and the facility was opened on 20 November 1976, the anniversary of the beginning of the Mexican Revolution.,where it remains to date. The Casasola Archive of the National Photo Library consists of 483,993 pieces, of which 411,904 are negatives – mostly glass plates and nitrates – and 72,089 positive prints. Of these, 43% are digitized and available for consultation in the automated catalog of the National Photo Library System.

Gallery

File:Madero_en_pachuca.jpg|Arrival of Francisco I. Madero at Pachuca

File:Insurrectos_%26_their_women,_Mexico_(LOC).jpg|Revolutionary soldieras and soldaderas (Adelitas)

File:Niño Soldado.jpg|Child soldier

File:Madero_en_Cuernavaca.jpg|Francisco I. Madero and Emiliano Zapata in Cuernavaca

File:Toma de Juarez.jpg|The victory at Ciudad Juárez Venustiano Carranza, Francisco I. Madero, Pascual Orozco, Francisco Villa 1911.

File:Decena trágica.JPG|Ten Tragic Days February 1913

File:Caballería constitucionalista.jpg|Constitutionalist Army cavalry

File:Venustiano Carranza y Álvaro Obregón.jpg|Venustiano Carranza and General Álvaro Obregón.

File:El cadáver de Emiliano Zapata, exhibido en Cuautla, Morelos.jpg|The body of Emiliano Zapata, exhibited in Cuautla, Morelos 1919

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Casanova, Rosa and Adriana Konzevik. Mexico: A Photographic History: A Selective Catalogue of the Fototeca Nacional of the INAH. Mexico: CONACULTA 2006. {{ISBN|978-84934426-51}}
  • Mraz, John. Photographing the Mexican Revolution: Commitments, Testimonies, Icons. Austin: University of Texas Press 2012.
  • Noble, Andrea, Photography and Memory in Mexico: Icons of Revolution. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2010.
  • Ortiz Monasterio, Pablo, ed. Mexico: The Revolution and Beyond, Photographs by Agustín Victor Casasola 1900–1940,New York: Aperture 2003 {{ISBN|9781931788229}}
  • ¡Tierra y Libertad! Photographs of Mexico 1900–1935 from the Casasola Archive. Oxford: Museum of Modern Art 1985.

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Category:Archives in Mexico

Category:Cultural heritage of Mexico

Mexico

Category:Government agencies of Mexico

Category:Culture of Mexico

Category:Art museums and galleries in Mexico

Category:Photography in Mexico

Category:Photography museums and galleries in Mexico

Category:Museums in Mexico

Category:History museums in Mexico

Category:1976 establishments in Mexico

Category:Museums established in 1976

Category:National museums of Mexico

Category:Mexican Revolution