Hand
& Eye: Fifteen Years of the Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor
Prize
September 19, 2005–January 8, 2006
Juanita Kreps and Lyndhurst Galleries

Guatemala City Dump: Life at
the Rim
MISTY KEASLER AND CHARLES D'AMBROSIO (2003)
The dump at the heart of Guatemala City, one of the world’s
largest, serves as a makeshift village for hundreds of Mayan Indians
who have migrated from the rural mountains in search of work and
better lives. Many of them were uprooted when army campaigns destroyed
their former villages during a thirty-six-year civil war that lasted
until 1996. Lacking marketable skills and facing a significant language
barrier, these struggling new urban dwellers drift without work
or money for subsistence. Most dwellings, only a few yards away
from the dump, are made of cardboard, cement, and corrugated tin.
The residents “move to the dump, rummaging through the trash
to find, essentially, a life—food and housing. They eat what
others have thrown away; they erect hovels out of scrap material.
The rim of the dump is now a ghetto for Indians, many of whom stay
for months, even years,” write Misty Keasler and Charles D’Ambrosio.
VIDEO
Excerpts of an Interview with Misty Keasler
PHOTO GALLERY
Photographs by Misty Keasler
banner image:
Installation view of Hand & Eye:
Fifteen Years of the Lange–Taylor Prize. Photograph
by Christoper Sims.
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