Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind)

ARTIST STATEMENT

In my projects portraits occupy a special place, they are made from conscious listening and observation. They contain the interactions, and though-feelings shared with the subjects. I create from collaborating with the women I photograph, with their consent. Body, place and traditions are present as strong elements. It means an opportunity to share ideas, and make statements about identity.

On my 1st trip to Mexico, I entered the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, a land with a carpet of mangos, an earth that shakes and breaks, a wind that dances with the dust, a sun that itches, and where women that are known for their flowers and very strong presence. I started ‘Vestidas de Viento’ (dressed with the wind), allowing me to dig beyond aesthetics, with the awareness that they are now subject to cultural extractivism too. As I met women, I started learning what it means for them to be ‘Gunaa Teca’ (Zapotec for women from Juchitán).

For the series, I am mixing reconstructed tradition by tracing its history with contemporary approaches. Women wear a garment of choice (mostly inherited from their grandmothers) or historical reconstructions designed by Mayra Cernas. I look at the connection to ancestry and the land, where women are embracing and transforming their own identity. This is the duality between colonialism and resistance. In the bodies, in the garments, and in the land.

The huipil (traditional top) is a meaningful piece that carries memory. It’s also becoming so popular, that it is now being mass produced. It can also be found piled in markets with the original patterns digitally printed. It was clear to me that what is happening to this single item was a reflection of what is also happening in the territory, and around the world. Today, we consume 5 times more clothes than what our grandparents used to, making fast fashion the 2nd largest polluter on earth. Yet some communities still craft and pass their garments, generation to generation, where tradition resists over trends.

ABOUT THE PROJECT

‘ A young women of Tehuantepec’ is the title of the first image registered of a woman wearing a traditional dress in the Tehuantepec Isthmus of Oaxaca, Mexico. It was a lithography made by artist Claudio Linati in 1826, as part of a series that depicted the mexican ‘types of people’. The women is standing by a nopal (cactus) with a hand resting on her waist, slightly tilting to the right. She wears a long skirt that marks her crotch and curves. As a top she wears a transparent piece, it is a sort of cape that falls from her head down. This image comes from a research done by Mayra Cernas, a textile creator that researched the representation of Tehuana women in traditional dresses as part of her art history studies, focusing on fashion materiality and techniques. She replicated some garments and was able to prove how these garments actually shape in different bodies from what was originally shown in historical representations from outsiders. We agreed that they were clearly showing the male, eurocentric gaze, over indigenous women. A gaze that tended to present female bodies as subjects of desire. Linati's image is followed by flood of artists that visited the area up until today. Many just staying on the aesthetics and folklorization.

I'm also an outsider, yet in my portrait series I connect with the women I photograph, resonating with their stories and inviting them to choose how they want to represent themselves. In the series, I mix images from my collaboration with Mayra, where women embody the historical garments, with images where women wear garments they generally inherit from their grandmothers and still wear today. Together, we reclaim the context, we propose other ways to pose and we aim to deconstruct ideas of what daily life means for a woman in Mexico (and the world) today.

I observe their connection to ancestry and the land, where both are under constant struggles and in urgent need to be treated with respect.I started to wonder how is this a metaphor to how female bodies are valued? How are the Zapotec (and other indigenous traditions) resisting or transforming? What do these garments mean for them today? Who are the women if they they chose not to wear them?

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Bianni outside her family home, where I was welcomed to stay during my 1st visit. She is wearing a huipil set gifted by her grandmother Cecilia.

© Jahel Guerra - Abril wears a meaningful garment from her family, it mango season when we met.
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Abril wears a meaningful garment from her family, it mango season when we met.

© Jahel Guerra - Abril wears a meaningful garment from her family, it mango season when we met.
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Abril wears a meaningful garment from her family, it mango season when we met.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Sótera in the plantain field. She told me she had a light and a dark side. When she wanted to be happy and cheerful she would be the light wearing the traditional garments, this one used to be her grandmothers. Her grandmother, Soledad, (Sótera's middle name is after this grandmother), gave it to her before passing away. She inherited all of her garments, and this one was her favorite. She remembers loving this huipil because of the design and colors they have, she feels is very unique and extravagant.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Sótera in the plantain field. She told me she had a light and a dark side. When she wanted to be happy and cheerful she would be the light wearing the traditional garments, this one used to be her grandmothers. Her grandmother, Soledad, (Sótera's middle name is after this grandmother), gave it to her before passing away. She inherited all of her garments, and this one was her favorite. She remembers loving this huipil because of the design and colors they have, she feels is very unique and extravagant.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
i

Abril wears a reconstruction of a historical garment made by Mayra, as a part of her research on the history of traditional garments. This is a mourning garment that women still wear today. Abril is holding cempasuchil flowers, the traditional flowers for altars during day of the death. This project aims to reclaim the way women are portrayed, breaking away from the colonial, male gaze.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Lupe wears a reconstruction of a historical garment made by Mayra Cernas, as a part of her research on the history of traditional garments. Lupe is a women alone outside her home, she chooses to connect with the land and enjoy a moment of leisure, and challenge the actual place that is expected of her. This project aims to reclaim the way women are portrayed, breaking away from the colonial, male gaze.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Lupe wears a reconstruction of a historical garment made by Mayra Cernas, as a part of her research on the history of traditional garments. Lupe is a women alone outside her home, she chooses to connect with the land and enjoy a moment of leisure, and challenge the actual place that is expected of her. This project aims to reclaim the way women are portrayed, breaking away from the colonial, male gaze.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Steph wears a reconstruction of a historical garment made by Mayra, based on a lithography as a part of her research on the history of traditional garments. This project aims to reclaim the way women are portrayed, breaking away from the colonial, male gaze.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Steph wears a reconstruction of a historical garment made by Mayra, based on a lithography as a part of her research on the history of traditional garments. This project aims to reclaim the way women are portrayed, breaking away from the colonial, male gaze.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Betty wears a reconstruction of a historical garment made by Mayra Cernas, as a part of her research on the history of traditional garments. This project aims to reclaim the way women are portrayed, breaking away from the colonial, male gaze.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Julissa wears a reconstruction of a historical garment made by Mayra, as a part of her research on the history of traditional garments. This project aims to reclaim the way women are portrayed, breaking away from the colonial, male gaze.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Nisa was the first Teca I met and photographed, in this image she wears with a family huipil. She open her home and her family to me.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Gema wasn't going out much those days, not only due to covid, but also because many ladies her age were disappearing. The rabona (skirt piece) she wears was made by her great grandmother, Juanita, she used to be the healer of town and used to make all the clothes. Gema remembers enjoying watching her do it. Before Juanita passed away, she gave the skirt to Gema and told her to keep it as a memory as it was one of her best creations.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Elisabeth at her home, at this time she was coming out of a healing process. She has recently lost her Grandma Rogelia, who left a big void for her. She wear a huipil Rogelia gifted her and means a long lasting connection to her.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Elisabeth at her home, at this time she was coming out of a healing process. She has recently lost her Grandma Rogelia, who left a big void for her. She wear a huipil Rogelia gifted her and means a long lasting connection to her.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Steph outside her home, at the edge of an empty pool. She didn't feel like wearing the full garment set, as this part of her identity is something she is coming to terms with. As a statement, she chose to wear a top she made with a very old fabric she found at her grandmother's sister home, it was made by one of them. This fabric was forgotten on a bag for over 50 years, and it is about 80 years old. It was meant to be an enagua (traditional skirt) and she took it with the hopes to make something out of it. Steph turned it into a top, and she wears it with the consciousness that one day it may just vanish as it is very fragile. But she keeps wearing it and it remains strong.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
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Lupe among the dunes in Chipehua, near an area that is undertreat for a railway development that aims to connect ships for commerce. Lupe is a local environmental activist and feminist. She wears a hand stitched huipil she likes because it makes her think of the designs that didnt have any flowers before, it makes her connect with her warrior side.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
i

Lupe among the dunes in Chipehua, near an area that is undertreat for a railway development that aims to connect ships for commerce. Lupe is a local environmental activist and feminist. She wears a hand stitched huipil she likes because it makes her think of the designs that didnt have any flowers before, it makes her connect with her warrior side.

© Jahel Guerra - Image from the Vestidas de Viento (Dressed with the wind) photography project
i

Lupe among the dunes in Chipehua, near an area that is undertreat for a railway development that aims to connect ships for commerce. Lupe is a local environmental activist and feminist. She wears a hand stitched huipil she likes because it makes her think of the designs that didnt have any flowers before, it makes her connect with her warrior side.

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