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Documentary Photographer's Activism On Display At Montco CC
Local documentary photographer Ada Trillo is the focus of a solo exhibition currently on display at Montgomery County Community College.

Courtney H. Diener-Stokes
October 20, 2022
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Philadelphia-based documentary photographer Ada Trillo is the focus of a solo exhibition
currently on display at Montgomery County Community College’s Pottstown gallery through
Oct. 28. Trillo’s interest in Latin American culture and community activism is highlighted
in her documentation of migration movements.
It was back in 2020 when MCCC Galleries Director, Patrick Rodgers, was first introduced
to Trillo’s work while preparing an exhibit for the Tri-State Artists Equity Association.
One particular photograph stood out to him that was awarded first place by juror Bridgette
Mayer, who owns the Bridgette Mayer Gallery in Philadelphia.
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“She had submitted two terrific photographs from her recent series La Caravana Del
Diablo, taken during her recent travels with a migrant caravan from Honduras through
Guatemala to the Mexican border,” Rodgers said. “One dramatic photograph showed a
huge group of people crossing a river, and in the foreground is a man either about
to pick up or having just handed off a baby to a woman. The whole photo has an anxious
movement to it that's really striking, but that baby, for me, was the emotional focal
point of the piece.”
Trillo’s photographs, some of which have been included in the permanent collection
at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, illustrate her natural skill and talent with a
camera, along with her instinct for what and where to photograph.
“She has a genuine sense of purpose about her work and a desire to give voice to people
who are often demonized or ignored,” Rodgers said. “She traveled with migrants throughout
Central America and Mexico just to document and tell their stories—she walked or ran,
ate, and slept among them, talked with them, collected contact information, and then
later kept in touch with them. Her work goes further into the realm of social justice
and activism than most documentary photographers by far.”
Trillo’s large-scale photographs serve as a window to the communities in which she
immerses herself through her work.
“You can walk through the gallery and peer in on these experiences she had with refugees
and asylum-seekers,” Rodgers said. “Most of the work is in black and white, but there's
one image in color—the largest photo in the exhibit--that shows a group of Mexican
National Guards confronting the caravan she is documenting.”
In the photograph there is a juxtaposition of the migrants raising their hands in
the air while the guards raise batons, and above it all is an unfurled rainbow Pride
flag carried by one of the migrants.
“It's another incredible moment captured by Ada Trillo, and it really draws your eye
through the space of the gallery,” he said.
Rodgers said that Trillo’s work successfully humanizes human rights issues facing
Latin American culture.
“Mainstream media portrays migrant caravans with alarm as a mass movement of people,
but Ada delves into the stories of as many people as she can to get at the crucial
questions at the root of migration,” he said. “She portrays a lot of families and
children and learns about the economic and educational reasons those families are
emigrating, as well as what kind of work they want to do in the U.S. or what kind
of educational opportunities they hope to have.”
Trillo illustrates how disability plays a role in the decision to emigrate, as well
as how the dangerous journey on foot or by train can disable many migrants.
“She also shows the hopes and opportunities for LGBTQ+ migrants who are fleeing discrimination
and violence,” Rodgers said. In addition to being a photographer, Trillo is a teacher and speaker who has a passion
for sharing her knowledge of photography with others, especially young people.
"At La Casa de Migrantes in Juarez, Mexico, Ada teaches a photography workshop every
summer to kids who are awaiting asylum applications,” Rodgers said.
Montgomery County Community College’s Pottstown Campus art gallery, housed in North
Hall (16 E. High Street, Pottstown), is located in a 19th-century building that served
as a brewery, mattress factory, knitting mill, and shoe polish factory. The art gallery
exhibits unique local collections and the work of area artists in a variety of media.
Exhibits change throughout the year. MCCC’s Pottstown gallery is free and open to
the public Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Free parking is available
at MCCC’s South Hall, 101 College Drive, a short distance from the gallery.
More about Ada Trillo
Ada Trillo is a documentary photographer based in Philadelphia, PA and Juarez, Mexico.
Trillo holds degrees from the Istituto Marangoni in Milan and Drexel University in
Philadelphia. Trillo’s work is concerned with human rights issues facing Latin American
culture. Trillo has documented forced prostitution in Juarez and the recent migrant
caravan attempting to reach the U.S. Most recently she documented the conflict in
Ukraine. Trillo has exhibited internationally at The Photo Meetings in Luxembourg,
The Passion for Freedom Art Festival in London and at the Anya and Andrew Shiva Gallery
at the John Jay College in New York. She is a recipient of the Leeway Foundation’s
Art and Change Grant, and in 2019 was named the Visual Artist-in-Residence for Fleisher
Art Memorial in Philadelphia. Her work is included in the permanent collection of
the Philadelphia Museum of Art
This press release was produced by the Montgomery County Community College. The views expressed here are the author’s own.
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