Praise for Vochos Unidos by Rodrigo Gaya Villar
"Through Rodrigo's creative, patient eye for composition and moment, the beloved Volkswagen Beetle chug-chugs into our hearts as a resilient, iconic symbol of Mexican pop culture and street life. Patch with ingenuity, painted in rebellion, parked in the middle of life, these vochos persevere as vessels of Mexican memory and mischief. Rodrigo is a rare talent capable of merging the rawness of documentary photography with the art of portraiture. We are willing and enchanted passengers on his visual road trip through not only Mexico, but the unstoppable human spirit." — Patrick Farrell, Pulitzer Prize Winner for Breaking News Photography.
"The Volkswagen Beetle is such an iconic car and I can't think of a better place to photograph them than their natural habitat. Gaya seamlessly incorporates each vehicle and tells a story with each photo. It's not always about the car, which makes Vochos Unidos so warm and relatable. I'm proud to have this book on my coffee table." — Larry Chen, author of Life At Shutter Speed.
"By seamlessly blending playful punch-buggy car-spotting with stunningly framed street photography, Rodrigo Gaya Villar vividly demonstrates that "car culture" simply is culture. His eye for dusty old beaters and tucked-away alleys highlights what other artists might ignore, and his work feels fresh and novel even with the iconic sillhouette of the Vocho as its uniting theme. Far more than a book of automotive photography, Vochos Unidos is a gorgeously affectionate portrait of both the Beetle and Mexico." — Victoria Scott, author of We Deserve This.
"Through a camera and his creative eye, Rodrigo Gaya Villar investigates Volkswagen Beetles known as Vochos from every imaginable perspective. In the process, he shows us joy, freedom, strife, and the pulse of megacity living. Across hundreds of beautiful photographs of this automotive icon, Vochos Unidos depicts humanity itself." — Kevin McCauley, author of Waiting for the Sun to Come Down.
"Vochos Unidos is a dazzling, street‑level tour of Mexico’s towns and cities, with the country’s ubiquitous Volkswagen Bug at its center. Gaya Villar roams Mexico’s regions, spotting these Vochos everywhere from the back alleys of Mexico City to the sandy shores of Oaxaca. The book is a visually poetic love letter to his homeland and its favorite, adopted child." — Oliver Wang, author of Cruising J-Town and Professor of Sociology at California State University, Long Beach.