South Puerto Rico – Ponce
Expedition Overview
Ponce is Puerto Rico's second city and its best-kept photographic secret. The historic center contains more than a thousand buildings from the Spanish colonial and Art Deco periods, many in colors that would be considered excessive in any other city — an architectural honesty about tropical light that tourism has not yet softened. The Plaza Las Delicias anchors the old city with the black-and-red Parque de Bombas firehouse directly opposite the cathedral, a composition that has existed unchanged since 1883.
José J. Rivera-Negrón approaches Ponce without the iconic Parque de Bombas shot — shooting instead the streets four blocks east where the plaster is falling from colonial walls built by Spanish engineers in the 1790s, where the buildings are unrestored and the faces are Ponce's, not a visitor's idea of Puerto Rico. The most extraordinary architecture in this city has never appeared in a travel article.
Expedition Itinerary
Day 1: Architecture — Plaza and Periphery
The day begins at first light at Plaza Las Delicias, where the morning sun hits the cathedral's western facade directly for 45 minutes before the square fills with commuters. The session then moves outward into the residential and commercial streets holding Ponce's ungentrified architecture — the Art Deco commercial blocks on Calle Marina, the Spanish colonial residential streets on Calle Victoria. The afternoon covers the Ponce Museum of Art, whose Italianate building is photographically extraordinary independent of what is exhibited inside.
The Goal of the Day: Find the building in Ponce that has never appeared in a travel article — visually extraordinary, completely undocumented.
Day 2: Portrait Ponce — People of the Plaza
The second morning returns to the streets for portrait work. Ponce has a distinct civic pride — people are genuinely interested in being photographed well. The session (6–11am) covers the street life flowing around the plaza: the shoeshiners who have worked the same corner for 30 years, the early vendors, the morning regulars at the colmados. The afternoon covers the Serralles Rum Castle from the exterior — architecture on the hilltop overlooking the entire south coast.
The Goal of the Day: Make a street portrait where the environment tells as much about the subject as the face does — find the layers: face, clothing, context, and the quality of the light falling on all three.
Book Your Expedition
Note: Final price may vary based on specific expedition details and customizations.
Expedition Leaders
José J. Rivera-Negrón
Expedition Leader & Documentary Photographer
José J. Rivera-Negrón is a Puerto Rican photographer whose work centers on resilience, human connection, and the documentary truth of places rarely photographed well. Born in Puerto Rico, his path to photography came through adversity — years that shaped fundamentally how he looks at light, at faces, and at the stories that ordinary streets contain. He shoots with the attention of someone who understands what it means to see a place clearly for the first time. A Light & Composition award-winning photographer with over 49 award recognitions including 4 Photo of the Month wins, he leads expeditions across Puerto Rico with the intimate local knowledge of someone who grew up on the island — knowing which beach is deserted at 5am, which street corner catches the right light, and which people will let you photograph them honestly.
What to Bring
35mm and 50mm primes for street and portrait work. Wide-angle zoom for colonial architecture — the streets are narrow and a 16–24mm is sometimes the only way to capture a full building. A small reflector for portrait fill in the narrow streets. Hat and significant water — the south coast heat is serious, especially mid-year. Comfortable walking shoes. A low-profile camera bag that does not signal a tourist with expensive equipment.


