
Oscillatory Motion
As part of the Fotoseptiembre festival, a group of image experimenters and explorers are presenting the Oscillatory Movement exhibition.
The exhibition will be presented virtually on the Zona de Riesgo platform and in person during the first week of September at the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana , Colima 196, Roma Norte, Mexico City.




Oscillatory Movement is understood as an energy of many; it is a meeting of concerns, a space of convergence. In this permanent laboratory, we build universes together, experimenting with actions in public spaces, creating sonic echoes, and showcasing the processes of our reflections. Oscillatory Movement is comprised of the processes developed by the Zona de Riesgo platform community, making it a space in constant transformation. We envision ourselves as a collection of visual narratives developed by Latin American authors.
The aim is to broaden the vision of a new generation of contemporary image makers, as well as their reflections on current social, political, and cultural events, through a collection of projects. Our narratives seek to contribute to the questioning of our cultural identities, as well as our ideological contexts, developed in a culturally diverse and changing region.
One of our pillars is the use of poor materials. We emphasize this as a political stance against the cultural impositions that frame cultural production. With this, we aim to engage with everyday Latin American life and bring the discourses closer to all economically accessible forms of production. We work with home printers and the photocopier on the corner of our house, with the intention of emphasizing the discourses, not the materials.
This exhibition will have three fundamental axes: The intervention in public spaces with the guerrilla system in which the authors will show their proposals in unconventional places, the Photobook as the construction of narratives, and the still image as an invitation to the universes we have built in the encounters that make up this community.
Bruno Bresani