The Museo Universidad de Navarra hosts the photography exhibition of the 2019 Latin American Architecture Biennial.
The exhibition can be visited in room 5 on floor -1 of the Museum, where two videos of the selected photographers, from Mexico and Ecuador, will be shown.

The photography exhibition linked to the VI Biennial of Latin American Architecture (BAL), held in September in Pamplona, can be visited until November 3 in room 5 of floor -1 of the Museo Universidad de Navarra. The exhibition shows two videos that bring together the work of the selected photographers: Lorena Darquea, from Ecuador, and Patrick López Jaimes, Onnis Luque and Marisol Paredes, from Mexico.
The Latin American Architecture Biennial is an initiative of the AS20 research group of the School of Architecture of the University of Navarra, and seeks "to be a channel for presenting in Spain recent and outstanding examples of young architects from the other side of the ocean," as well as "to generate a forum in which to strengthen ties, shorten distances and establish a solid and firm counterpoint to the Anglo-Saxon universe," explains the organization.
In this sixth edition, held from September 24 to 27 at the School of Architecture and Baluarte, Uruguay was the guest country. For its part, Photographs of Architecture from Latin America exhibition took place for the first time in 2017 as a complement to the exhibitions of the biennial itself. This is its second edition. "We are excited to think that this photography exhibition will become another small link between Spain and Latin America, which will also help us to get to know those societies, their richness and illusions better," says José Manuel Pozo, professor at the School of Architecture and member of the organization.
Regarding this year's edition of the photography exhibition, he explains that "it allows us to continue to touch the Latin American architectural reality, from a less canonical prism and closer to a current situation far removed from media models". Specifically, he points out that "together with the brilliant set of photographs by Marisol Paredes and Lorena Darquea, which represent a sample of rigorous and specialized work of architecture photography of the highest level, we find the work of Onnis Luque and Patrick Lopez, who develop a visual narrative that in both cases goes through intermediate, undefined, unfinished places, in which we strangely find beauty".