Description
German-born Mexican photographer. Photographs by Hugo Brehme document two episodes
of the Mexican Revolution: La Decena Trágica of 1913, the ten days of counter-revolutionary insurrections against President
Francisco Madero; and the
American occupation of Veracruz in 1914. Also included are several general views of Mexico taken between 1914 and 1920.
Background
Hugo Brehme, born in Germany in 1882, arrived in Mexico in 1908 with his wife and photographic equipment. Though he expected
the visit to be relatively
brief, he spent the rest of his life in Mexico and is considered one of the founders of Mexican pictorialist photography.
His early photographs were
documentary, and include views of the Mexican Revolution that have served as source material for various 20th century Mexican
artists. The most famous
of these, the portrait of Zapata in Cuernavaca, was for many years attributed to Agustín Víctor Casasola, with whom Brehme
collaborated from 1913
to1914. After the revolution, Brehme turned to pictorialism, making impressionistic views of the Mexican landscape and inhabitants.
These photographs,
taken as he wandered with cumbersome equipment through remote, often mountainous regions, were highly acclaimed when published
in his collection México
Pintoresco (1923). Brehme continued to publish photographs in magazines such as National Geographic and Mapa, and in various
books about Mexican culture
and geography, until his death in 1954. Brehme, Hugo, México pintoresco, México D.F., 1990 (1923). Brehme, Hugo, México: una nación persistente: fotografías, México D.F., 1995. Brehme, Hugo, Pueblos y paisajes de
México, México D.F., 1992.