Carpoolers #37
Alejandro Cartagena, Mexican, born 1977
2011-2012
Medium/TechniqueArchival pigment print on cotton paper
DimensionsFramed: 58 × 38 × 3 cm (22 13/16 × 14 15/16 × 1 3/16 in.)
Credit LineMuseum purchase with funds donated by the Curators Circle: Photography
Accession number2022.208
On View
Not on viewClassificationsPhotographs
Description Born in 1977, Alejandro Cartagena’s photographs – whether urban landscapes or portraits – bring social and environmental issues to the forefront. These four photographs from the “Carpoolers” 2011-2012 series evoke the experiences of workers is Northern Mexico, where Cartagena is based. Over one year, he photographed pickup trucks from a Highway 85 overpass, documenting trades workers’ commutes from Monterrey to San Pedro. The riders lay low in different color flat-bed trucks, sometimes surrounded by the equipment needed for their jobs, often covered in blankets. While reading or resting, the workers endure a dangerous 45 to 90 minute commute depending on traffic – they live where housing is affordable and work in a wealthy suburb that is not accessible by public transportation. Cartagena’s compelling visual storytelling draws attention to the urban development crisis in contemporary Mexico, calling into question larger socio-economic inequities.
Provenance2021, Alejandro Cartagena, Monterrey, Mexico to Patricia Conde Galeria, Mexico City; 2022, sold by Patricia Conde Galerie to the MFA. (Accession date: April 20, 2022)Unidentified artist, Mexican or American, 19th century