Mexican Wrestling as Art

A wall of oversized photos of Mexican wrestlers dominate the gallery space at Equator Books in Venice, Calif. Noah Adams, NPR hide caption
A wall of oversized photos of Mexican wrestlers dominate the gallery space at Equator Books in Venice, Calif.
Noah Adams, NPRIn a bookstore in the funky California beach town of Venice, larger-than-life-sized color photographs of masked Mexican wrestlers are the focal point of a very different art exhibit.
Malcolm Venville photographed about 150 "Lucha Libre" wrestlers for an upcoming book. Translated literally, "lucha libre" means "free fighting." To many Latinos, it's professional wrestling, vaudeville, a venerable cinema genre and the Bushido code of the Japanese Samurai all wrapped up in one campy and crowd-pleasing spectacle.
Venville has made those campy characters into art objects. Equator Books has 13 of his highly detailed wrestler photos on display -- including Astro Boy, Super Pinocho 3000, Raziel, Super Porky and Coco Verde, the green clown.