After receiving a Bachelors Degree in
Journalism from the Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana, MedellÌn,
Colombia, Luz Elena Castro began her career as a staff photographer for
El Mundo Newspaper
in
1979. This led to a position as a photojournalism instructor for the
Mass Media Career Department of Bolivariana University in 1985, and
freelance assignments for many different magazines and
newspapers.
In 1986 she won a scholarship from
Navarra University in Spain. She worked as a photojournalist for the
EFE News Agency, Madrid, Spain, provided a weekly commentary for the BBC
while in London, and was the European correspondent for El Mundo
Newspaper, Medellín. In 1988, she was department director, lead
photographer, and graphic editor for El Tiempo Newspaper,
Bogotá.
Personal photographer for Cesar
Gaviria during his 1989-90 presidential campaign, she served the next
four years as director of the photography department and head
photographer for the Gaviria Presidency. Following a year as graphic
editor of Cromos Magazine, she resumed her work as a freelance
photojournalist.
Throughout her career she has shown
her photos in the most prestigious Galleries and Museums in Colombia. In
1994 she represented Colombia in the Fifth Biennial of Art in Havana,
Cuba, was chosen to participate in an exhibition at the Ludwing Forum
Museum, Aachen, Germany, and served as a judge in several Salons of
Photography in Colombia. Living and working in California since 1996,
she documents life through people, always looking to catch the human
drama of features, character, and environment.
In January of 2002, she began to
document the homeless Sonoma County seniors. Her exhibit that poignantly
captured the new face of homelessness in an economically rich area
opened in December 6, 2002, at the Cultural Arts Councilπs Gallery in
Santa Rosa, CA.
In her “Lejos del Hogar” project,
she gave cameras to members of West Marin’s Latino community, and taught
them how to take photos used in weekly English lessons. An exhibition of
Luz Elena’s documentary work opened March 28, 2004 at Gallery Route One
in Point Reyes, CA. Serving as a bridge between the Latino and American
Communities; she developed a second project in 2005 called “Who Opens
the Doors of the Town in the Morning.” The students learned how to be
photojournalists, and exhibited their work at Gallery Route One. The
impact of their photographs made a profound impression, and demonstrated
the talent and creativity of eight Mexican immigrants that live and work
in West Marin, CA. The third phase of this Photography/Literacy class
was called “Bridge Builders.” It is a photo essay depicting members of
the Point Reyes Mexican community and people whose work in Pt Reyes
bridges the divide separating the Spanish-speaking and English–speaking
communities, was displayed at Gallery Route One in the fall of 2006.
"Un Ojo Alerta," a retrospective of
her 25 years as a photojournalist sponsored by the Banco de la República
is opening November 17, 2006 at the Museo del Oro Quimbaya, in Armenia,
Colombia, and will tour through the country for the next three years.
"Since the beginning of my career,
I have felt a special connection with the forgotten people of the world.
They are a very important part of my work. With photos of their faces,
dramas, and daily life, I have tried to call peopleπs attention to them.
In spite of their situation, poverty, abandonment, and misery, there is
a strength that comes out of their spirits. I strive to capture it."
www.luzelenacastro.net ~ (415) 747-0043, 2007