Immemorial time: archeology photography

Know why pre-Hispanic ruins have captivated countless gazes.

Aztec Idol (Chac-mol) (ca.1890) by UnidentifiedFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

As part of this broad visual memory, preserved in public and private archives, the Colección y Archivo Audiovisual de Fundación Televisa guards valuable archeology photographs that reveal Mexico as seen by foreign eyes as well as their own.

The Pathway of the Dead and Pyramid of the Moon (1883-1891) by William Henry JacksonFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

The pre-Hispanic ruins captivated (and captivate) the most disparate photographers, from the travelers of the nineteenth century –fans of the new photographic medium, archaeologists or explorers– to the photographers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries –photojournalists, film-photographers or artists.

Aztec Calendar Stone (ca. 1858) by Claude-Joseph Désiré CharnayFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Immemorial time

Millions of images of the ruins of pre-Hispanic temples, palaces and monuments make up a vast and exciting iconographic collection about the ancient civilizations that populated what is now our country before 1521.

Aztec Idol (1883-1891) by William Henry JacksonFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

What could have attracted –or even demanded– the attention of such a great variety of views and interests?

Hall of Columns (ca.1900) by Charles B. WaiteFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Archaeological vestiges, be they abandoned walls, broken columns, remains of facades, friezes or cracked reliefs, have undeniable power and visual appeal.

Temple of the Warriors (ca. 1944) by Juan GuzmánFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Its mystery, framed in an ancestral time, seems to demand to be documented and interpreted by the curious who explore beyond their own borders.

Observatory (ca. 1930) by Yáñez FotoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Photographers who entered the world of stone remains, with their photographic devices, delved into the beauty and enigmas of other cultures. 

East annex of the "Quadrangle of the Nuns" (ca. 1860) by Claude-Joseph Désiré CharnayFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

They, explorers and adventurers, sought to unravel either with panoramic or details shots, volumes and shapes, light and darkness, but, above all, moments of a remote and, apparently, lost time.

Patio of the Grecas (ca.1900) by Charles B. WaiteFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Désiré Charnay, Augustus and Alice Le Plongeon, Teobert Maler, Henry William Jackson and Charles B. Waite, among many others, were some of the pioneers of archeology photography in Mexico.

"Illustrated Yucatán Album. Ruins", Alice Dixon and Augustus Le Plongeon, ca. 1876, From the collection of: Fundación Televisa Collection and Archive
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"Illustrated Yucatán Album. Ruins", Alice Dixon and Augustus Le Plongeon, ca. 1876, From the collection of: Fundación Televisa Collection and Archive
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Zapotec ceremonial center of Mitla (ca. 1947) by Juan GuzmánFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Already in the 20th century, the photojournalist Juan Guzmán –a German nationalized Mexican— continued this undertaking by photographing, among other archaeological sites, the ruins of Teotihuacán, Tula, Xochicalco, Monte Albán, Mitla, Uxmal, Tulum and Chichén

Monolith of Tláloc, Juan Guzmán, 1964, From the collection of: Fundación Televisa Collection and Archive
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Olmec colossal head, Juan Guzmán, 1957, From the collection of: Fundación Televisa Collection and Archive
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Untitled (1949) by Armando Salas Portugal (Colección y Archivo de Fundación Televisa)Fundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Armando Salas Portugal revealed, in a gray scale, the ruins of Uxmal, Chichén Itzá and Palenque emerging from a jungle and a sky retouched with color.

Anonymous, from the "Plagiarism" series (triptych) (2006) by Gerardo SuterFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Gerardo Suter, from a perspective that –in the words of Alfonso Morales– “transcends the superficial appreciation of the ruins”, has reinterpreted some pre-Hispanic icons, such as the Atlanteans of Tula and the Aztec Stone of the Sun.

Scene from "The sign of death" (1939) by Luis Márquez RomayFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Pre-Hispanic vestiges have led to the emergence of the most varied representations: from the cinema, in films such as El signo de la muerte (Chano Urueta, 1939);

Scene from "Salón México" (1948) by Luis Márquez RomayFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Salón México (Emilio Fernández, 1948);

Scene from "Cabeza de vaca" (1990) by UnidentifiedFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Cabeza de vaca (Nicolás Echeverría, 1990);

Scene from "Deseada" (1950) by Manuel Álvarez BravoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

and Deseada (Roberto Gavaldón, 1950).

Chac mool (1986) by Annie LeibovitzFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

In advertising, such as Annie Leibovitz’s 1986 Mexico Soccer World Cup commemorative portfolio;

Pyramid of the Magician (2007) by Tomás CasademuntFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

to artistic and scientific photography that experiments with the possibilities of the photographic medium, such as the Maya Puuc series by Tomás Casademunt.

Sayil viewpoint (2007) by Tomás CasademuntFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

With a large format camera, the Catalan photographer captured the rest of the Mayan ruins under the moonlight. The largely unpredictable result plunges us into an immemorial time typical of stone constructions.

Teotihuacán (1981) by Bernard PlossuFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Among the pre-Hispanic vestiges, there are very popular motifs, for example, the Pyramid of the Sun in Teotihuacán and the Temple of Kukulcán (also known as El Castillo) in Chichén Itzá.

Temple of Quetzalcóatl (ca. 1930) by Yáñez FotoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

But other motifs –stone masks, friezes and stelae, stairways and temple finials, sculptures and idols— have also been immortalized in photographs used as postcards, collected in albums, published in books and films.

Scene from "The Treasure of Montezuma" (1968) by UnidentifiedFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

The abundance and repetition of these images confronts us with multiple versions of, for example, the pyramid of the Sun...

Margo in Teotihuacán, Juan Guzmán, ca.1944, From the collection of: Fundación Televisa Collection and Archive
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Scene from "Tarzan and the Mermaids", Unidentified, 1948, From the collection of: Fundación Televisa Collection and Archive
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Stone mask (ca. 1940) by Lola Álvarez BravoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Yet despite time, viewpoints, and diverse functions of archeology photography, every stone remnant that has been unearthed, documented, and photographed is still there to be rediscovered and deciphered.

Fragment of the film Raíces [Roots] (Benito Alazraki, 1953).

Credits: Story

The exhibition Immemorial time: archeology photography is based on a image curation on archeology photography that was presented in Zona Maco, Mexico City, in 2016.
Texts, curatorship and virtual adaptation: Cecilia Absalón Huízar.
Image digitization and editing: Omar Espinoza.
Archive: Gustavo Fuentes.

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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