dulce pinzón: “the real story of the superheroes”.

Dulce Pinzón is a Mexican-born, Brooklyn-based photographer. In The Real Story of the Superheroes she explores the cultural identity of Mexican immigrants working in the US and the value that Americans place on the labour they provide (which their economy has come to rely upon). Set against the now ingrained but seldom-examined idea of American “heroism” post-9/11, Pinzón take the lens of her own immigrant history and experiences in Mexico to ask a simple question: “what really is a superhero?”

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(Bernabe Mendez is a window cleaner in New York City and sends home $500/month to his family in Mexico)

To raise the point, Pinzón creates a ludicrous but photographically engaging contradiction. Her subjects, all Mexican immigrants working low-wage jobs to send money home to their families, are pictures at work in traditional superhero costumes. Spider Man does the windows. Cat Woman changes diapers…

Often over-looked and maligned by the very people they are serving, these workers have silently become a fixture of the US economy even as Republican presidential candidates proposed wide-sweeping and totally illogical immigration reform to appeal to conservatives.

The pictures enlighten through their sense of entertainment; though we’ve trained to at-first relate to the legend of the superhero, the juxtaposition of what the photos are calling out comes to the top of mind very quickly.

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(Minerva Valencia is a nanny and sends home $400/week).

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(Paulino Cordozo loads trucks for a greengrocer and sends home $300/week).

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(Noe Reyes works as a delivery boy and sends home $400/week).

Via Swiss Miss 

19.20.21.

This article also appeared on Josh Spear

In 2006 the planet crossed a tipping point – more than half the world’s population now live in cities.

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Focusing on 19 cities with populations greater than 20 million people at the turn of the 21st century, 19.20.21. is a 5 year initiative to study the global effects of urbanization. The project plans to use the data collected to become an indispensable tool for urban and business planning.

Since most of the world’s biggest cities lie on a coastline, the study is paying particular attention to issues related to the global warming, ocean resources, and energy distribution while also studying factors like crime dynamic and calamity risk. Once gathered, the site aims to distribute its findings in traditional channels like print and TV as well as online and in a series of seminars to be held in each of the 19 cities that were studied.

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