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Ann Parker 
Portrait with Chickens, Momostenango 
1970
  
Silver dye bleach print 
19 5/8 × 13 1/8 ins (49.9 × 33.3 cm) (image) 
  
Metropolitan Museum of Art 
The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Fund, through Joyce and Robert Menschel, 2016, Accession Number:2016.465, © Ann Parker 
  
 
LL/78387 
  
Curatorial description (Accessed: 2 November 2017)
Between 1971 and 1979, Ann Parker traveled throughout rural Guatemala, working alongside the itinerant photographers who plied their trade at village fairs and religious festivals. These journeymen offered their clientele the rare opportunity to sit for a portrait, thus providing the images necessary for government identification cards, as well as personal mementos. For many of the subjects, these inexpensive postcard-sized (or smaller) photographs were the only pictures they would ever have made of themselves. Parker’s series, published in the 1982 book Los Ambulantes: The Itinerant Photographers of Guatemala, documents a photographic practice that existed since the nineteenth century, but had, by the 1970s, almost disappeared. Here, Parker reveals the vibrant, if rudimentary, trappings of makeshift studios, which featured boldly painted backdrops that transported sitters from a rural village to Guatemala City. The young boy in this portrait does not smile or mug for the camera; instead, his rigid stance and deadpan facial expression suggests the novelty of his experience posing for a picture. In its directness, Parker’s photograph captures more than the practice of itinerant photographers, and conveys the quintessential magic of photography. 
 

 
  
 
  
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