

The work of Dorian Ulises López Macías (Aguascalientes, Mexico, 1980) operates at the intersection of photography, archive, and contemporary visual culture. Since 2010, he has developed Mexicano, an ever-growing archive that brings together photographs captured across different regions of the country and functions as a critical re-reading of Mexican aesthetics. Rather than documenting identities, his practice interrogates the systems of representation that have historically shaped notions of beauty.
Through a candid and at times playful gaze, López Macías shifts the center of the image toward bodies, gestures, and styles drawn from the streets of Mexico, activating a vernacular cosmology in which the popular, the queer, and the everyday emerge as legitimate forms of presence. In his images, appearance does not operate as a surface, but as language: a site where desire, belonging, and visual dignity are negotiated.
MEXICANO, the first in-depth reading of the archive, will be presented at BODEGA in February 2026 and offers a reflection on more than a decade of images through a contemporary consideration of appearance, aesthetics, and beauty. The exhibition understands the archive not as accumulation, but as structure: a visual system that reconfigures dominant imaginaries and affirms beauty as a situated cultural practice.
The work of Dorian Ulises López Macías (Aguascalientes, Mexico, 1980) operates at the intersection ofphotography, archive, and contemporary visual culture. Since 2010, he has developed Mexicano, an ever-growing archive that brings together photographs captured across different regions of the country and functions as a critical re-reading of Mexican aesthetics. Rather than documenting identities, his practice interrogates the systems of representation that have historically shaped notions of beauty.
Through a candid and at times playful gaze, López Macías shifts the center of the image toward bodies, gestures, and styles drawn from the streets of Mexico, activating a vernacular cosmology in which the popular, the queer, and the everyday emerge as legitimate forms of presence. In his images, appearance does not operate as a surface, but as language: a site where desire, belonging, and visual dignity arenegotiated.
MEXICANO, the first in-depth reading of the archive, will be presented at BODEGA in February 2026 and offers a reflection on more than a decade of images through a contemporary consideration of appearance, aesthetics, and beauty. The exhibition understands the archive not as accumulation, but as structure: a visual system that reconfigures dominant imaginaries and affirms beauty as a situated cultural practice.









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