Moving Photos Show Life in Apartheid-Era South Africa

by - March 02, 2019

Wedding party, Orlando West, 1970.
Image: Photograph by David Goldblatt
Celebrated South African photographer David Goldblatt took up photography in 1948, the same year the all-white National Party came into power and apartheid began in his country.   Goldblatt, was just 18 at the time, documenting the impact of apartheid — the government-implemented system of racial segregation in South Africa — would become his life-long mission.  Over his decades-long career, the acclaimed photographer, who died at age 87, built a powerful legacy and body of work showing everyday life in his homeland through the apartheid years and after. 

Goldblatt was born in Randfontein, a mining town west of Johannesburg, to a Jewish family that fled from Lithuania to South Africa in the 1890s. Today he is considered an icon of photography and a national treasure in the country.

As a young man, Goldblatt set out to be “a missionary with a camera, because there was no attempt internationally to tell the world what was beginning to happen” a spokesperson for Goodman Gallery told Global Citizen. But over his many years of work, his ambition changed.  “I would say I am a self-appointed observer and critic of the society into which I was born, with a tendency to giving recognition to what is overlooked or unseen,” he once told his friend and fellow documentary photographer Paul Weinberg. Weinberg is also the curator of the retrospective “On Common Ground” exhibition.  Goldblatt turned away from trying to photograph major moments and instead looked to document normal life under a not-so-normal system. Many of his images show the relationship between white and black South Africans. His work often captured the dynamic between those who owned the land and those who worked it.

“In the early 1960s, he became very interested in photographing the people of the Plots, Afrikaners who lived on smallholdings around Randfontein ... he would drive around, knock on a door and ask if he could take photographs of whatever life was taking place.
A farmer's son with his nursemaid
“Most of these places were harsh, in the landscape and in the standard of living – harsh, too, in terms of the relationships between the white owners and the black servants who lived on the plots,” he said. “Many [owners] were deeply racist. They had a profound fear of black people. At the same time, they had a relationship with them on their plots that was intimate and affectionate, generous to a degree that surpassed what I knew from my middle-class urban life.”  Much of Goldblatt’s work was shot in black-and-white, a conscious decision on his part to use his photography as a means of portraying the social and political climate during the decades of apartheid. 

Under apartheid rules, South Africans were racially classified as “white,” “black,” “colored,” or “Indian.” Categorization into these groups was largely based on physical appearance though employment, socioeconomic status, and even eating and drinking habits were also used to determine a person’s race.  A white person could not marry or have sexual intercourse with a person of any other race during apartheid. And people of non-white races were forced to live in designated areas. Goldblatt documented the lives of Indian families in a suburb of Johannesburg, called Fietas by its residents, who faced forcible relocation.
Margaret Maroney: Sentenced to R100 or 50 days imprisonment suspended for 3 years for living in this flat in a White Group Area, Orion Court, Bree Street, Johannesburg, December. 1981.
Image: Photograph by David Goldblatt
Though Fietas was once home to black South Africans, “colored” people, and Indians, the government began moving black and “colored” people out of the area in the 1950s as part of the Group Areas Act. By the late ‘70s, all non-white people had been forced out of the area and Fietas was redeveloped as a community for low-income white people.

2:45am: The first bus of the day pulls in heading to Pretoria 1984
Goldblatt said “color seemed too sweet a medium to express the anger, disgust, and fear” that the rules of apartheid inspired. After apartheid ended in 1994, an optimistic Goldblatt returned to taking photos in color, signalling his hopefulness for the future of South African society, according to the Goodman Gallery.  But toward the end of his life, the award-winning photographer returned to the black-and-white medium.

Lulu Gebashe and Solomon Mlutshana, who both worked in a record shop in the city, Mofolo Park, September 1972.
Image: Photograph by David Goldblatt
Children's class of the African Music and Drama Association, Orlando High School, Soweto, November 1972.
Image: Photograph by David Goldblatt

 Over the past decade, South Africa, under the leadership of Jacob Zuma, has been embroiled in a series of corruption and political scandals. And Goldblatt was “discouraged by what he saw as a return to certain anti-democratic values present in post-apartheid South Africa,” a spokesperson for the Goodman Gallery said.  Goldblatt didn’t think of himself as an artist, according to the Goodman Gallery. Instead, he saw his work as an attempt to engage with the consequences of actions and as an examination of South Africa’s values. And his powerful images invite viewers to reflect on those consequences and values even now, more than two decades after the apartheid ended.


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