How John Moore’s Brilliant US-Mexico Border Photos Also Migrate

Reading The Pictures
Vantage
Published in
5 min readApr 25, 2018

by Christa J. Olson

Let’s start with the obvious. John Moore’s photographs of the U.S.-Mexican Border — featured in his new book, Undocumented, on PBS, Instagram, and the New York Times — are thematically and structurally all about dividing lines.

Sure, a photograph here or there uses some other framing device, but for the most part Moore’s photographs of the border rely on lines separating here and there, this side and that side, caught and free, shadowed and revealed. It’s an inevitable choice. Moore’s subject is the border, after all.

A United States Border Patrol agent pursuing a migrant near Falfurrias, Texas, in 2014. Photo: John Moore / Getty Images

Then again, the border really isn’t his subject. Moore’s ultimate focus isn’t so much the line itself, but the way that line infiltrates the lives of people living right alongside it and far to the north and south. Sure, Moore’s photographs of the Rio Grande and the border fence are striking, haunting, effective. That said, this sort of image would be available to almost any photographer, possibly even an amateur. As such they are somewhat mundane. The obvious gets interesting, however, as the border itself starts to migrate. In many of Moore’s photographs, the border itself is nowhere in sight yet still pursues the people whose lives it dictates.

This sense of pursuit is literally visible in Moore’s photograph (above) captioned “A United States Border Patrol Agent pursuing a migrant near Falfurrias, Texas, in 2014.” This photograph, shot from above, abounds in lines. The trunk and branches of a scrubby, lichen-covered tree reach skeletal fingers across the bodies of two running men. Beneath them, the agent reaches out — his arms and hands stiffened into parallel lines straining to capture the running migrant. The migrant’s right arm reaches back, seeming to grasp the agent’s right arm and link them together. His left arm pulls him forward, a hopeless yet desperate line of escape. His capture is inevitable, though. The border pursues him in the form of two arms stretched out to engulf him. The border agent, head down and face obscured, personifies a border that the sprinting migrant cannot possibly escape.

“In many of Moore’s photographs, the border itself is nowhere in sight yet still pursues the people whose lives it dictates.”

Moore’s photographs tell us that border agents too are caught by the border. The U.S. Border Patrol is having trouble finding sufficient recruits. The drilling agents-in-training stacked against one another in the photograph below suggest that even those who do volunteer must be harangued and disciplined into embodiment of the border they patrol. They must inhabit the unyielding rigidity of the line, its strict division of in or out, and the border comes to inhabit them. The border is an inhuman and an inhumane thing. Lined together, rammed too close, held taut, the soon-to-be border agents must become both.

A Border Patrol instructor with trainees at the agency’s academy in Artesia, N.M. New agents must complete a months-long training course at the New Mexico facility before assuming their posts. Photo: John Moore / Getty Images

Moore walks the border with migrants, vigilantes, and officers. He also follows it southward into Central America and northward into the United States. Men line up to climb aboard the “Beast” a train bound north through Mexico to the U.S. border. An immigrant family in Tucson lines up on a couch and gazes together out the door of their home as if they and the couch might be sucked out through it and into oblivion. And the border pursues people even into oblivion.

A man killed in a suspected drug-related execution in 2012 in Acapulco, Mexico. Violence has surged in Acapulco, once Mexico’s top tourist destination, spurring the flight of many Mexicans. Photo: John Moore/Getty Images

The photograph above tops the New York Times article about Moore’s work. In a sense, it’s only obliquely about the border. The caption links the murdered man to drug-related violence in Acapulco and then connects the surging violence there to an increase in out migration. The photograph itself, however, shows the border pursuing the dead man. In that sense, it reminds us that the border is a cause of violence, not just a passive recipient of violence-caused migration. The sharp line of shadow in the photograph amplifies the physical drop off that runs parallel to it. The man, left exposed, is still buried in the shadow. He is dropped into a hole and below the border line. Likewise, the cool light of the spotlight trained on his body and the warm light flooding the dirt yard above enact another border, and neither side promises safety or escape.

Do you choose violent death on one side of the border or hostile terrain and constant pursuit (note the tire tracks) on the other? And which side is which?

Families at a memorial service for two boys who were kidnapped and killed in February 2017 in San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala. Photo: John Moore / Getty Images

Lines of threat and constraint run parallel to the border, snake out from it, and crisscross Moore’s photographs. Through his lens, we see not a border with two defined sides and clear binary options but a mess of conflicting choices. The simplicity of the undulating border fence or a man gazing from one side to the other quickly gives way to a group of mourners in Guatemala gathered at a memorial service for two murdered children. At the center of the photograph stands a boy with his hands in his pockets and a worried, ambivalent face. His shirt reads, ‘The United States of America / Love It or Leave It.’

If only the millions of people touched by the border actually had that simple of a choice.

On May 1st, John Moore will be in conversation about his Undocumented project with curator Anna Van Lenten as part of the Half King Photography Series. A limited number of signed copies will be available for sale with all the proceeds going to the Chris Hondros Fund.

Follow John Moore on Instagram.

Originally published by Reading The Pictures, the only site dedicated to the daily review of news and documentary photography. Sign up for the Reading The Pictures Week in Re-View email. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

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Vantage

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