Exhibition of apartheid South Africa in photographs

University News Last updated 01 December 2011

People Apart: Cape Town Survey 1952 is a unique exhibition of images from the extensive archive of Bryan Heseltine (1923-2008) whose work has not been exhibited for 50 years.

Curator of the exhibition and Professor of Photography at Birmingham City University, Darren Newbury, explains: “Bryan Heseltine grew up in the Eastern Cape, was educated in the UK at Dartington Hall School in the late 1930s but then returned to South Africa in 1940, where he eventually established his own photographic business.

“In the early 1950s Cape Town was a city in the midst of profound transformation. Added to the social challenges of rapid urbanisation were South Africa’s unique set of political tensions and conflicts. The Nationalist Party, elected in 1948, was just beginning to implement its policy of apartheid, which extended existing segregation with the ultimate aim of a society based on total racial separation.

The images selected for the exhibition offer a fascinating insight into the lives of South Africans who would feel the full force of apartheid through the 1950s and beyond. They were made in the late 1940s and early 1950s and provide a rich and intimate description of life in a number of townships and areas of the city: Windermere, the Bo-Kaap, District Six, Langa and Nyanga.

The photographs belie the official image projected by the South African government, documenting some of the dreadful housing conditions that existed on the periphery of the city, but also testify to the vibrancy of social and cultural life, including the work of street craftsmen, beer brewing, music and dance.

Profesor Newbury added: “One of my aims for the exhibition was to draw attention to the history of the images and how they were taken up, first by the South African Institute of Race Relations, in the cause of social reform and campaigns for better housing for some of the city’s poorest inhabitants, later, in England, the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, brought the work into the ambit of the emerging anti-apartheid movement. This was an early attempt to find a visual language with which to represent apartheid South Africa to a British public.

“Underlying the exhibition is the question of what it means for both British and South African audiences to look at the images now, in the post-apartheid era.”

People Apart: Cape Town Survey 1952 is exhibiting at the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford until 8th January 2012. For more information, see http://www.prm.ox.ac.uk/index.html

In addition, a symposium is taking place on Wednesday 7th December at the Pitt Rivers Museum where speakers from the USA and the Netherlands will be considering a wider range of African photographic archives and practices, from documentary and official image-making to vernacular forms and artistic re-interpretation. Contributors will explore strategies for engaging with the diversity of African photographic archives from the perspectives of research and practice, including the representation of photographs from the colonial past for contemporary audiences.

Attendance at both the exhibition and the symposium is free of charge. To attend the symposium, please register via email: christopher.morton@prm.ox.ac.uk

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