
Hardcover Books:
He Threw The Last Punch Too Hard
HABIBI
La Puente
Omo Change
Limitless Africans
Living Among What’s Left Behind
No Place on Earth
FAITH
A Light Inside
46750
Standing Strong
Gaza Girls: Growing up in the Gaza Strip
The Dream (Special Edition)
Talibes: Modern Day Slaves
This is My Country
Endurance
Signs of Your Identity
The Dream
Sicarios: Latin American Assassins
Bhopal Second Disaster
Black Tsunami Japan 2011
Destino
Crying Meri: Violence Against Women in Papua New Guinea
Condemned
Princess to Slave
Urban Cave
Life in War
Occupied Pleasures
The Unravelling
Digital Books:
Faces of the Middle East
White Pride
Sicarios: Latin American Assassins
Romania by Joseph Rodriguez
Black Tsunami Japan 2011
Before the Limit/ Antes del Limite
Bronx Boys

La Puente
by Charlotte Schmitz
Winner of the First FotoEvidence W Award
by Charlotte Schmitz
Winner of the First FotoEvidence W Award
La Puente is the biggest brothel in southern Ecuador, in the city of Machala, where 170 women are working. The word puente means bridge, in Spanish a masculine noun, el puente, adapted to fit the context and feminized – La Puente.
The photos were created in collaboration with the women, who chose their own poses and later painted with nail polish on the Polaroids. The nail polish was initially used to provide anonymity but quickly developed into a creative instrument, and a way to beautify the world within the brothel. Not only their selected poses, but also the use of nail polish tell about the women’s inner and outer perceptions, raising questions as well about the sexualized picture of women in our societies. Working with Polaroids and nail polish gave them the possibility to control and personalize their own photos, breaking down the power structures in the artistic production itself, by letting the women enter the creative sphere.
"When I first heard of La Puente, I was 18 years old and living in Machala, banana plantations, a bridge, a compound on the right side, a dusty road leading to it, and suddenly a traffic jam. Surprised, I asked surprised for its reason, here outside of the city. "It’s our brothel, the biggest in the province,” answered my male friends laughing. Ever since, I was wondering how the world within the brothel would be. Ten years later, I visited La Puente for the first time. Since then, hundreds of Polaroids, interviews and videos were made. I was given bed sheets by the women, which became part of the work and exhibitions. They are the only personal items in the rooms of La Puente, breaking its monotony."
Most of my male friends went to La Puente. Sometimes maybe just to look at women, but they went. And this was probably the point, when I realized that girls and women are not as free as boys and men in our societies, but also in developing our own sexualities. Since childhood I had a keen sense of justice, and fighting for more equality, diversity and justice has become essential in every of my works and is my personal motivation to be an artist. La Puente is very much connected to my time in Ecuador, as an 18-year old girl, but also now as a woman, aspiring for change to a more equal society.
The publication of the book La Puente is supported by The VII Academy, the Grodzins Fund and indivdual contributors.

