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Moises Levy (born 1963) is a lifelong residence of Mexico City where he works as an established architect. His earliest interest in photography and architecture occurred on a trip to New York City when he was just 13 years old. Levy’s appreciation of the natural relation between architecture and light was deepened when he began his architectural studies in 1982 at the Universidad Iberoamericana. This was further deepened by his subsequent travel to Paris, Boston and Venice. These travels served to illuminate to him the relationship between architecture and light, and the unbreakable bond between the two. It was his early interest in the qualities of light that led him to photography. He has now been drawn to landscape work as a counterpoint to his work as an architect. While Levy’s appreciation began in architecture and his career is centered there, he has a preference for landscape photography because it lets him be more flexible and organic than his work as an architect.
In 1998, Levy began to explore photography more deeply. He had a broad interest in influences, artistic composition, styles and history. He appreciates the states that he has learned from and the history of the medium. His photographic work has been inspired by people like Manuel Alvarez Bravo, Eugene Atget, Edward Weston, just to mention a few. Levy has been largely a self-taught photographer. However, he has attended several workshops with Byron Brauchli, Mark Nelson, among others. Framed Moises Levy art are very popular with both private and public collectors.