Cristina Goettsch Mittermeier’s mixed media collage work emerges from a life lived across borders. Shaped by migration to the United States and Canada, and by a conscious return to Mexico, her country of origin, each piece examines what it means to belong, to be displaced, and to carry identity as both inheritance and burden. Through form and motif, the collages trace the emotional geography of expatriation and repatriation, while situating personal experience within the broader realities faced by women and marginalised communities worldwide.
At the core of this practice is the photograph. Each work begins with one of Mittermeier’s original images, often portraying women whose dignity persists despite historical erasure, social inequality, or cultural marginalisation. Onto this photographic ground, she layers hand-cut floral forms constructed from documents accumulated over a lifetime: passports, birth certificates, immigration papers, divorce records, visas, and official forms that once defined her in bureaucratic terms. These materials, stripped of their administrative authority, are reassembled into symbols of resilience, growth, and survival.
The flowers function as both offering and reclamation. They soften the dehumanising rigidity of paperwork while refusing to erase it. In transforming records associated with control, permission, and judgment into organic forms, Mittermeier asserts authorship over her own narrative and extends that gesture to women and children whose stories are too often told for them, or not at all. The collaged elements carry memory, loss, and endurance, embedding the work with a layered intimacy that resists abstraction and calls into question the ways in which lives are measured and constrained by documentation.
There is also, in the act of adding flowers, a gesture of giving back. Many of the women portrayed in these works come from communities that have historically had little access to material wealth, visibility, or restitution. The flowers become symbolic acts of care, gratitude, and recognition, made from fragments of a life molded by borders and bureaucratic systems. By offering blooms formed from her own lived experience, Mittermeier creates a quiet exchange that honors the dignity, strength, and beauty of women who have carried so much with so little.
The colours, textures, and visual language of the collages consciously draw from the iconography of her childhood and from Mexico’s rich artistic traditions. Echoes of papel picado, votive offerings, vernacular textiles, and ceremonial altars surface throughout the work, spaces where life and loss coexist without contradiction. This aesthetic memory merges with photography to create a hybrid visual language in which the personal and the cultural are inseparable.
Taken together, each piece can be understood as a form of pictorial magical realism, rooted in the traditions of Latin American storytelling. As in those narratives, the extraordinary does not appear as fantasy, but as a natural extension of lived reality. Flowers bloom from official papers, personal history becomes ornament, and intimacy expands into collective meaning. In this in-between space, Mittermeier constructs images where memory, identity, and resistance are made present rather than explained.
Ultimately, this body of work reflects a return to homeland and to the self, born from a life of movement facilitated through official systems, and an awareness of how those same systems exclude and erase others. It reflects how women especially carry their histories in their bodies and on their backs, how they adapt, survive, and bloom in inhospitable terrain. Each collage stands as a declaration that beauty can be built from rupture, taking documents once used to divide and control and transforming them into bouquets of continuity, agency, and belonging.
- One of a kind
- Mixed-media on paper