Al Rendon is a San Antonio-born and based commercial and fine art photographer who is particularly interested in the Mexican heritage of his native city. Rendon's influences include scene and street photographers such as Tina Modotti, Manuel ÃÂlvarez Bravo, and Henri Cartier-Bresson. He has exhibited his work in the United States, Latin America, and China.
Rendon had a 50-year retrospective at the Witte Museum in San Antonio in 2023âÂÂ24. Part of the Fotoseptiembre annual festival, it was curated by Bruce Shackelford and Katherine Nelson Hall.
Jack Morgan calls Rendon "one of San Antonio's longest-running photographers."
Rendon began taking pictures when he was around 12 years old, when his mother had difficulty using the viewfinder of her Instamatic camera. He quickly developed a liking for photography.
Rendon's first published photograph was a result of an assignment at Catholic Central High School. It was a "moody, spotlit image of 1972 Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern speaking in front of the Alamo." As the photographer noted, "itâÂÂs not about getting the most perfect picture ⦠itâÂÂs more about having a vision and following through with it.â In 1973, he surreptitiously snapped a Led Zepplin concert. It led to work with Elton John and others.
As a photographer, Rendon's initial mainstay was photographing local rock bands. A well-received image of Ted Nugent brought him work with other famous musicians, such as Mick Jagger, Iggy Pop, and Stevie Ray Vaughn. He quickly branched out to other types of music, including blues guitarist Freddy King and various conjunto musicians.
Rendon developed a close association with the Fiesta Commission, becoming an official photographer for the annual Fiesta San Antonio celebration. He photographed the A Day in Old Mexico and the Charreada in 1981. Rendon became a regular photographer for the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center's annual Tejano Conjunto Festival.
It was his work with the Guadalupe that enabled Rendon to resist the pressures he was under to assimilate into Anglo American society. He recalls: "When I was coming of age in the '60s, my family very strongly pushed me to learn English and not speak Spanish and to assimilate" As first-generation immigrants, there was pressure, "whether you were Mexican or American. I would play down being Mexican until I graduated high school. Not until I started working with the Guadalupe did I start to really get into Mexican culture."
Rendon calls the documentation of San Antonio "important," because â youâÂÂre talking about places and people that arenâÂÂt around anymore.â Among the "lost" subjects is the Tejana singer Selena Quintanilla. Eduardo Diaz, acting deputy director of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Latino, calls Rendon's 1993 portrait of her âÂÂthe national portrait of Selenaâ (it is in the collection of the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery).
One of Rendon's sorrowful commissions was documenting the murals in Uvalde that commemorate school children and teachers that were massacred in the local school shooting.
According to Nicholas Frank, the 61 images in Rendon's retrospective at the Witte Museum include "signature images of conjunto and rock musicians, Fiesta charros in action and other icons of San Antonio culture, including the ever-present Virgen de Guadalupe."
As an educational component, the exhibition included a simulated darkroom, with standard equipment because Rendon wanted visitors to visualize the evolution of photography, from black-and-white darkroom photography to the digital age. As he noted to Marco Acquino: "A lot of kids today are accustomed to taking pictures with their phones, and they aren't aware of the history and how much technology has changed since I started 50 years ago."
Tomás Ybarra Frausto, in a catalog essay, notes that Rendon's photographs "capture the special ambiente of the city as a multicultural metropolis." Rendon told Frank: âÂÂMy culture is my family.â He added that he didn't mean just blood relatives, but "the family of San Antonio, the cultural institutions, the people, the artists, the politicians, the poets, the writers, theyâÂÂre all important to our history.âÂÂ