Ramón Masats Spanish, 17/03/1931-4/03/2024
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Paper: 40 x 50 cm / 15 3/4 x 19 3/4 in
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In Hermanos Fossores de la Misericordia, Guadix, Granada, 1959, Ramón Masats transforms a scene of rural Spain into an image of extraordinary theatrical force. Five gravedigger monks move toward the cemetery, each carrying his tool, their dark habits cutting across the pale road and the bleached trunks of the trees. The composition is almost cinematic: the architecture at the left, the empty sky, the procession entering the frame with a rhythm that feels both solemn and strangely choreographed.
Masats had an exceptional ability to find tension between documentary truth and visual invention. Nothing here appears staged, yet everything seems perfectly placed. The figures advance with the gravity of a ritual, while the landscape around them — dry, austere, silent — gives the photograph an atmosphere that is unmistakably Spanish, but never folkloric. It is a Spain of gesture, faith, labour and dust; a country observed with sharpness, affection and irony.
Made in 1959, the image belongs to the great period in which Masats helped redefine Spanish photography after the war. His camera rejected official sentimentality and looked instead at everyday life with a modern eye: direct, graphic, sometimes humorous, always alert to the absurd beauty of reality. In this photograph, death is present, but not melodramatic. The scene has dignity, movement, and an almost surreal elegance.
This photograph remains one of Masats’s most memorable images because it contains so much in a single instant: religion and work, austerity and grace, documentary precision and poetic ambiguity. It is an image that does not explain itself too quickly. It stays with the viewer, like a procession glimpsed once and remembered forever.