In 1977, Henner Hofmann, Afonso Muñoz, Gonzalo Martínez Ortega, Ignacio Nacho López, Óscar Menéndez and Juan Rulfo founded the Archives of Ethnic Communities, with more than 45 documentaries about the indigenous communities in Mexico. Hofmann began his career as a cinematographer after four years of traveling throughout Mexico, resulting in his first film,
Bajo el Mismo Sol. Hofmann was the first Mexican cinematographer to win a Coral Award for best photography in the Havana Film Festival. He won an
Ariel Award, Mexico's most prestigious award in the film industry, for his cinematography in José Buil's
The Legend of the Mask (1991). In 1992, Hofmann founded the Mexican Society of Cinematographers (AMC) and was president from 1992 to 2004. He was a member of the Technicians and Cinematographic Production Guild, the Mexican Academy of Arts and Cinematographic Science, and the Screen Writers' Guild in Mexico City. In the U.S. he was a member of the
American Society of Cinematographers (ASC), the
International Cinematographers Guild,
IATSE Local 600, and a member of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Hofmann worked as a teacher in film schools in Mexico City. From 2008 to 2016, he was the headmaster at the
Centro de Capacitación Cinematográfica film school. ==Filmography==