Bosque Alto Andino Chingaza presents high Andean forest photography as path through tangled branches—documenting dense interconnected ecosystem where trees, plants, and organic matter create complex web visualizing interdependencies between humans and nature. Winograd's documentary lens captures Chingaza's high-altitude forest as fragment of larger Colombian landscape archive, experimenting with printing materials to reconstruct whole from this piece. The work embodies photographer's belief that mimetic dream of photography remains alive: through careful observation, camera reveals nature's essence and our belonging to ecological whole. This image generates contemplative emotions about biodiversity's fragile beauty, offering visual connection that helps reflection on how forests represent hope amid environmental crises.
The artist looks for a path between tangled branches. Reconfiguring a personal archive of diverse Colombian landscapes, experimenting with a variety of printing materials to reconstruct a whole from these fragments, recreating a forest in the center of Bogotá. Wynograd also examines a historical archive of landscapes, the roots of his own vision. He believes that the old mimetic dream of photography is still alive. These exercises aim to weave a series of visual connections and reflect on the complex web of interdependencies between humans and nature. If there is a light of hope in the midst of overlapping crises, it is the awareness that we all belong to a whole. Perhaps these photographs can help in that reflection.
High Andean forest photography documenting Chingaza's tangled interconnected ecosystem—fragment of Colombian landscape archive. Bosque Alto Andino from Enjambre by Miguel Winograd. Available at The Art Design Project, Miami Beach.
High Andean Forest Photography – Bosque Chingaza, From Enjambre 2021 by Winograd
Bosque Alto Andino Chingaza, 2021
From the series Enjambre
Pigment Prints / Selenium- Toned Gelatin Silver Prints
Limited Edition.
B&W Edition
Unframed
Miguel Winograd is a Colombian photographer. After years of graduate study in Latin American History at New York University, he completed the documentary photography program at the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York. His work has been exhibited in New York, Berlin, Mexico City and Bogotá, and published in different media, including The New York Times and The New Republic.

















