A personal journey through the depths of Peru

A personal journey through the depths of Peru
Where Is Home? — Growing up, photographer Moises Saman had a complicated relationship with the notion of ‘home‘. However, when Magnum asked him to contribute to a collective project exploring that very theme, he returned to Peru, the country of his birth, seeking to find a new connection with the country.

Moises Saman’s relationship with his Peruvian heritage has always been, by his own admission, somewhat complicated.

Though he was born in Lima (his dad’s side of the family all hail from Callao, just west of the country’s capital), his family moved when he was just two-years-old, resulting in him spending the majority of his childhood in the suburbs of Barcelona with his father and Catalonian mother. He wouldn’t return to the South American country until his early 30s.

For the photographer, Peru was a source of conflict in his formative years. Growing up in Spain, Saman – not quite Peruvian, yet certainly not Spanish either – grappled with a desire to truly fit in, to mixed results. By the time his parents’ marriage came to an end, the notion of ‘home’ had become truly elusive.

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman / Magnum Photos

“I wasn’t interested in my Peruvian side back when I was growing up,” he explains, speaking from his current home in Tokyo. “I went to school in Spain – I wanted to embrace that part.”

“I wanted to be like the other kids, but I was always a little bit somewhere in between. I didn’t look quite Spanish. I wanted to fit in and be Catalan, in my Spanish life and background.”

So, when Magnum got in touch last year regarding him contributing to their extensive HOME project – a series which set photographers the brief of exploring what the word means to them – Moises was left with much to mull over.

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

As one of the foremost conflict photographers of his generation, rootlessness is an integral part of Saman’s life in photography: he has lived and worked in Egypt, Iraq, Afghanistan and Lebanon (to name just a few), while also counting New York and Tokyo as places he’s lived during his life.

In fact, it was the dislocation that he felt growing up in Spain that ultimately pushed him into pursuing photography. “It was probably the most significant factor,” he says. “It absolutely pushed me. I left home at 17 and I never really went back, at least not until many years later.”

After much debate, Saman eventually decided on returning to the part of himself he had most alluded: Peru. Journeying out with a close friend, he spent two weeks travelling the country, forging links with the land and culture, as well as estranged family members from his father’s side (“it definitely opened up the dialogue around issues of family”).

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

When it comes to the images, the relationship he shares with his country of birth is certainly prevalent. Though taken from a distance – and with an affecting sense of detachment – Saman’s photos also depict an intimacy and familiarity in tandem. His home is one of constant development: always fluid, never truly one thing or the other.

“Since I started going back, it’s a place that has had quite a pull on me. It’s somewhere that I’m absolutely drawn to, even though my work and my life could not be further away from Latin America.”

“Peru is a place with which I feel a real connection, but it’s a strange connection – it feels familiar, but it really isn’t. It was about going to a home where there’s a familiarity everywhere, yet, at the same time, it feels quite foreign. I guess it’s still a discovery for me.”

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

PERU. September, 2017 © Moises Saman

HOME, a collaboration between Fujifilm and Magnum Photos runs from 18 – 27 May, 2018 at The Vinyl Factory, London. The photobook can be ordered from Magnum website.

For further information on the project and international exhibitions, see here.

Latest on Huck

“Struggle helps people come together”: Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory
Music

“Struggle helps people come together”: Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory

Huck’s February interview — To hear more about the release of the indie darling’s first collaborative album, we caught up with her and Devra Hoff to hear about the record, motherhood in music and why the ’80s are back,

Written by: Isaac Muk

Nxdia: “Poems became an escape for me”
Music

Nxdia: “Poems became an escape for me”

What Made Me — In this series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that shaped who they are. Today, it’s Egyptian-British alt-pop shapeshifter Nxdia.

Written by: Nxdia

Kathy Shorr’s splashy portraits inside limousines
Culture

Kathy Shorr’s splashy portraits inside limousines

The Ride of a Lifetime — Wanting to marry a love of cars and photography, Kathy Shorr worked as a limousine driver in the ’80s to use as a studio on wheels. Her new photobook explores her archive.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Lewd tales of live sex shows in ’80s Times Square
Culture

Lewd tales of live sex shows in ’80s Times Square

Peep Man — Before its LED-beaming modern refresh, the Manhattan plaza was a hotbed for seedy transgression. A new memoir revisits its red light district heyday.

Written by: Miss Rosen

In a world of noise, IC3PEAK are finding radicality in the quiet
Music

In a world of noise, IC3PEAK are finding radicality in the quiet

Coming Home — Having once been held up as a symbol of Russian youth activism and rebellion, the experimental duo are now living in exile. Their latest album explores their new reality.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Are we steamrolling towards the apocalypse?
Culture

Are we steamrolling towards the apocalypse?

One second closer to midnight — While the rolling news cycle, intensifying climate crisis and rapidly advancing technology can make it feel as if the end days are upon us, newsletter columnist Emma Garland remembers that things have always been terrible, and that is a natural part of human life.

Written by: Emma Garland

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now