In recent years, the Latino population has increased rapidly in areas of the United States with traditionally low concentrations of Latinos. Latinos often live scattered within these emerging communities, forced to navigate social isolation and social services not tailored to serve their cultural and linguistic needs. Latinos' invisibility in Pittsburgh, PA, manifests in the absence of records of the Latino presence in the city's museums and public archives. OjO Latino, a community-engaged project, sought to advance the inclusion of the Latino community in Pittsburgh through Photovoice. This participatory expression methodology enables individuals to share their stories with the larger public through self-made photographs and narratives. The intentional organization of the project as a group activity facilitated the transfer of power over the project to participants, creating solidarity and cultivating trust. During four meetings, participants took part in a short photography training, discussed their photographs addressing the meaning of being Latino in Pittsburgh, and selected thirty-four photographs for exhibition, organizing them in four themes: Work, Customs, Family, and Landscape. OjO Latino held one exhibit in a community venue and another at the University of Pittsburgh. In addition, the photographs are available in an electronic public repository. OjO Latino served a dual purpose of expanding the visibility of Latinos and educating the larger non-Latino community in Pittsburgh. The OjO Latino team got closer to the ways Latino immigrants see and experience the city. Their gaze challenged our own views and experiences and also spoke to the salience of nostalgia and social networks in their lives. The open discussion of what it means to be Latino in an emerging community in the United States, the opportunity to produce a visual account of it, and the public acknowledgement of the presence of this diverse population promote ethnic identity and solidarity, which have the potential to foster social and mental health and carry an important political message within a strong anti-immigrant climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]