Description
The Sun Echoed Like A Song is an exhibition of photographs made in Eduardo L Rivera’s childhood hometown near the Arizona/Mexico border. Taking inspiration from light and heat, he has been exploring the personal histories of family, community, and environment throughout the last decade.
Rivera takes his visual cues from this project’s central character, Phoenix, and its ever-present light and heat—two intangible forces that we feel but we cannot directly see or photograph. Yet light and heat wield direct and enigmatic power over who and what Rivera photographs. While seeking this subject in everyday moments, Rivera moves fluidly between two very different analog cameras: the 6 x 7 medium format and the 4 x 5 field camera. The results of his moving between these two precise instruments to interpret and organize what he sees within the frame, his knowledge, clarity of intention, and sense of space all become obvious. Whether using the handheld camera or the one upon a tripod, he might stage the image. Rivera responds to what he sees in front of him.
This catalog includes an essay by Light Work’s associate director Whitney Hubbs.
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Eduardo L Rivera is an artist from Phoenix, Arizona. His photographs have appeared in Aperture, Capricious, Der Greif, and the New York Times Magazine, with solo and group exhibitions throughout the United States. He was awarded the Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship, the Magenta Foundation Emerging Photographer Award, and most recently, the En Foco Fellowship Award. He has been an artist-in-residence at Mass MoCA, North Adams, MA, the Visual Studies Workshop, Rochester, NY, and the TILT Institute for the Contemporary Image, Philadelphia, PA. In 2019, he was a participant at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Eduardo received a BFA in photography from Arizona State University in 2011 and an MFA in photography from the Massachusetts College of Art in 2016. He has taught at Harvard University and the Rochester Institute of Technology, and currently teaches between New York University and the Rhode Island School of Design.