fbpx
Skip to main content
Global Press Journal
Donate newsletter

Topics

  • Civil Liberties
  • Environment
  • Global Health

Regions

  • Africa
  • Americas
  • Asia

Special Coverage

  • Shifting Democracies
  • A Global Crisis: The Cost of USAID's Abrupt Shutdown
  • Style Guide
  • About Global Press
  • Corrections
  • Shifting Democracies Reporting Fellowship
  • Newsletters
  • Donate
Support Global Press

Photojournalism

Connected

Global Press Journal reporters carry their cameras as they work and live. The moments they capture highlight human connection across the globe.

Sort by

Location

  • Africa
  • Americas
  • Argentina
  • Asia
  • Cameroon
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Guatemala
  • Haiti
  • India
  • Indian-administered Kashmir
  • Kenya
  • Mexico
  • Mongolia
  • Nepal
  • Nigeria
  • Puerto Rico
  • Rwanda
  • Sri Lanka
  • Tribal Nations
  • Uganda
  • United States
  • Zambia
  • Zimbabwe

Topics

  • Arts
  • Community
  • Eat
  • Family
  • Health
  • Homes
  • Nature
  • Play
  • School
  • Work
  • Worship

Editor's Choice

Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico

Manuel Gómez works every night selling tacos, hamburgers, hot dogs, quesadillas and other items from his mobile cart on Avenida Chapultepec, a major road in Guadalajara, Mexico. He says sales have been down between 70% and 80% over the last two months, leaving him more worried about the economic situation than about the coronavirus.

Photo by Maya Piedra

Mexico City, Mexico

Juan José Gutiérrez Pinal, 47, makes kites at home to sell to neighbors in Mexico City, Mexico. He sells them every February and March, but since his construction job was suspended due to the coronavirus, he decided to sell the kites this June too.

Photo by Mar García

San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Mexico

Employees of Jurisdicción Sanitaria, the government institution in charge of public health centers in the borough, disinfect public areas in downtown San Cristóbal de las Casas, a city in Mexico’s Chiapas state.

Photo by Adriana Alcázar González

Oaxaca de Juárez, Mexico

José Azcona stands in front of his shop in Oaxaca de Juárez, Mexico. Azcona is a monero, someone who makes giant puppets for celebrations. All events in Oaxaca have been canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic, putting Azcona and his fellow moneros temporarily out of work. “My puppets have just been here,” Azcona says. “They haven’t been able to go out onto the streets.”

Photo by Ena Aguilar Peláez

Mexico City, Mexico

Karen Cerón, right, helps Karla Rey prepare for a dance performance in downtown Mexico City, Mexico, during “Contigo en la distancia,” which means “with you at a distance.” For LGBTTTIQ+ Pride Day, the National Coordination of Dance hosted the daylong event – which included live dance performances, classes and talks – on its social networks.

Photo by Mar García

Puebla, Mexico

From left, Pamela Rodríguez Vela, José Ramón Fernández and Octavio Escobar Blancas paint a home in Puebla, Mexico. Neighbors, community groups and nonprofits around the city organized a neighborhood cleanup of the historic city center. Participants were entered in a raffle, and the winner had their home painted for free.

Photo by Patricia Zavala Gutiérrez

San Isidro del Palmar, Mexico

Guillermo Antonio Altamirano Ramírez monitors his cornfield on the banks of the Tonameca River in San Isidro del Palmar, a town in Mexico’s Oaxaca state. The river flooded in August after heavy rainfall, leaving soggy crops and football fields. “No one is denying that this is how nature is,” Altamirano says, recalling when Hurricane Paulina came through the area nearly 23 years ago. “This doesn’t even compare to Paulina. This was just a little flood.”

Photo by Sarai González

Chilpancingo, Mexico

Herman Vázquez García, better known as Alibastik, sews wrestling masks in Chilpancingo, a city in Mexico’s Guerrero state. Vázquez has been wrestling for more than 40 years, but he slowed down toward the end of 2019 to prepare for his retirement from the ring. In addition to participating in the sport, he makes masks for wrestlers, a trade that today has become part of his economic sustenance. “This job doesn’t make me rich, but it does help me take care of necessary expenses,” Vázquez says.

Photo by Avigaí Silva

Mazunte, Oaxaca, Mexico

Erika Martínez and Silverio Arango make bread to sell at the Mercado Alternativo Artesanal in Mazunte, a town in Mexico’s Oaxaca state. “The recipe is the same one we’ve been using since we started almost six years ago,” Arango says. “Except that we improved it by using sourdough instead of yeast.”

Photo by Sarai González

San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Mexico

César Aceves makes chiles en nogada at his restaurant, Mesón de la Cofradía, in San Cristóbal de las Casas, Mexico. The dish, which features stuffed poblano chiles and a walnut sauce, is offered during August and September because that’s when the ingredients are available.

Photo by Marissa Revilla

Ecatepec, Mexico

Roberto García emcees an event on the roof of a home in Ecatepec, Mexico. García has used his talents as a sonidero to entertain neighbors since the pandemic began. “We did it with the aim of paying tribute to the neighbors who had fallen ill or passed away due to COVID and bringing a bit of happiness and music to everyone in quarantine,” García says. His rooftop sonideros gained attention over the months, which eventually led to an invitation from Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Ecatepec, an artist collective, to play in Ecatepec.

Photo by Aline Suárez del Real

Calpan, Puebla, Mexico

Aldahir Díaz Aguilar, left, and Pedro Maldonado discuss operations as they walk through a creole poblano chile farm in Calpan, a region in Mexico’s Puebla state. The duo work with Sociedad Cooperativa Sabores de Calpan, a cooperative that encourages local residents to visit farms to learn about plant cultivation.

Photo by Patricia Zavala Gutiérrez

San Pedro Pochutla, Oaxaca, Mexico

Rosa Martínez, 45, sells fish on the streets of San Pedro Pochutla, a city in Mexico’s Oaxaca state. “We are selling less than normal,” says Martínez, a single mother. “Before, I used to come every day. Now I come to sell every other day, but I have to come and sell, so I can take care of my children.”

Photo by Sarai González

Chilpancingo, Guerrero, Mexico

Livier Poblete Gutiérrez anoints Edna Carime Abad Delgado, left, with smoke before she enters a temazcal, or sweat lodge, in Chilpancingo, a city in Mexico’s Guerrero state. In this neighborhood, Emperador Cuauhtémoc, healing temazcales are held frequently. Carime Abad Delgado says the ancestral ritual can improve the immune system.

Photo by Avigaí Silva

Puebla, Puebla, Mexico

Arnulfo Mastranzo paints arrows in the parking lot of Bodega Aurrerá, a shopping center in Puebla, Mexico.

Photo by Patricia Zavala Gutiérrez

Oaxaca, Mexico

The artists known as Line Marker, left, and Notek adhere an image to a wall in downtown Oaxaca, Mexico. Line Marker chose Benito Juárez for the image to provoke humor and represent strength in these difficult times. “In Mexican history, Juárez symbolizes the determined struggle against invasion,” Line Marker says. “It’s the same now: the invasion of a virus that evolved and is generating fear in its wake.”

Photo by Ena Aguilar Peláez

Mexico City, Mexico

Joel Espinoza Román, 17, left, and Aída Lucero Hernández, 32, clean and paint the metal used to assemble a market stand in Mexico City, Mexico. The pair construct, maintain and disassemble stands throughout the city for people who operate the temporary markets during the day but need them taken down overnight.

Photo by Mar García

Tecámac, Mexico

Chantal Monter cuts Eduardo Chávez’s hair at her salon, Zynadeyu Barbería, in Tecámac, State of Mexico. Since the federal government has allowed some nonessential businesses to open, she decided to open back up and follow the suggested hygiene measures: She wears a face mask, uses antibacterial gel, allows no more than two people in at a time and only accepts clients by appointment.

Photo by Aline Suárez del Real

San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Mexico

Micaela Elizabeth Gordillo Vázquez fills bottles with hand sanitizer at Tequio, a hand sanitizer factory in San Cristóbal de las Casas, in the Mexican state of Chiapas. Most of the hand sanitizer produced at the factory is sold at a reduced cost in the city or donated to indigenous communities who lack running water for handwashing.

Photo by Adriana Alcázar González

Tecámac, Mexico

Fitness instructor Wendy Lechuga leads, from left, Nataly Rojas, Angélica Rosas, Marlene Salcedo and Renata Herrera in exercises at a basketball court in Tecámac, State of Mexico. The group asked Lechuga for help exercising during the voluntary quarantine. “We looked for a large place where there wouldn’t be any people, so we could keep a distance of 1.5 meters between each of us,” Herrera says.

Photo by Aline Suárez del Real

Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico

Carlos Verdín, a volunteer, rests after preparing approximately 400 meals at Vrindavan Deli, a restaurant in Guadalajara, Mexico. During the pandemic, volunteers from different religions joined together to distribute meals to migrants, people without homes and others in need. Doctors and nurses at the Red Cross and Civil Hospital of Guadalajara have also received meals.

Photo by Maya Piedra

Chilpancingo, Guerrero, Mexico

Ciresthel Bello Ríos, a doctor at the Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero, conducts a COVID-19 test on Marco Antonio Espinoza Cortés at a medical station, which was installed at a kiosk in Francisco Granados Maldonado Park in Chilpancingo, a city in Guerrero, Mexico. Espinoza said he had some COVID-19 symptoms and that some of his friends have died from the virus, which is why he came to do the test.

Photo by Avigaí Silva

Mexico City, Mexico

Ivan Pulido, right, and Sergio Nájera, get ready for a live, socially distanced show with the dance company México de Colores. The show is part of the event “Contigo a la distancia” at the Shakespeare Forum in downtown Mexico City. “Every rehearsal, every show, every chance we get to step onstage is a kind of magic that can only be lived by being there,” Pulido says.

Photo by Mar García

Mexico City, Mexico

Ángel Nájera Herrera sells sweet bread from a cart in San Jerónimo, a neighborhood in Mexico City, Mexico. Nájera Herrera, 22, has sold bread, coffee and sandwiches from his cart for four years. He says his business has dropped off in recent weeks: On this day, he says, he only sold two coffees instead of the 40 or 50 he would usually sell before. The bread, however, is still popular.

Photo by Carolina López
  • First
  • <<
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • >>
  • Last
Global Press Journal
  • About Global Press
  • Global Press Style Guide
  • Join Our Team
  • Corrections
  • Write a Letter to the Editor

Contact

5636 Connecticut Ave NW
PO Box 42557
Washington, DC 20015
[email protected]

202-240-2705

Information

  • About Global Press
  • Style Guide
  • Contact Us
  • Partner
  • Subscribe to Newsletters

Brands

  • Global Press
  • Global Press Institute
  • Global Press Journal

Connect with Global press

Newsletter Signup.