Afrapix was a collective agency of amateur and professional photographers who opposed
Apartheid in South Africa
Apartheid (, especially South African English: , ; , "aparthood") was a system of institutionalised racial segregation that existed in South Africa and South West Africa (now Namibia) from 1948 to the early 1990s. Apartheid ...
and documented South Africa in the 1980s. The group was established in 1982 and dissolved itself in 1991.
About Afrapix
Afrapix was independently funded by its members, who were both black and white. The group received both national and international feedback, as their photographs were used across the world. Oxfam used photographs by a number of Afrapix members to illustrate their 1990 publication 'We Cry for our Land: Farmworkers in South Africa', and some Afrapix pictures were also used in Oxfam's 'Front Line Africa: The Right to a Future' (1990). Afrapix members photographed their own projects and also conducted
workshop
Beginning with the Industrial Revolution era, a workshop may be a room, rooms or building which provides both the area and tools (or machinery) that may be required for the manufacture or repair of manufactured goods. Workshops were the on ...
s in black communities that focused on photography and literacy through artwork. Afrapix members shared their technical knowledge while mentoring individuals in these areas.
As the period was known as the "struggle years," the photographs and projects produced through Afrapix were labelled as "struggle photography." Many of the photographers considered themselves political activists or had a
political agenda
In politics, a political agenda is a list of subjects or problems (issues) to which government officials as well as individuals outside the government are paying serious attention to at any given time.
The political agenda is most often shaped ...
, and worked to raise awareness about the evils of apartheid. The various artists of Afrapix agreed that they were a team working against apartheid, but that their inspirations came from different places.
Many of the images were of rallies or protests, instances of
authority brutality, and impoverished areas. Kylie Thomas suggests that the history of social documentary photography in the Afrapix period is probably more complex and heterogenous than often suggested, especially when analysing the work of women photographers such as Gille De Vlieg and Gisèle Wulfsohn.
A detailed timeline of Afrapix is accessible at the SA History Online website.
Principles and Objectives
Paul Weinberg, one of the co-founders of Afrapix, said that Afrapix aimed to be "an agency and a picture library and to stimulate documentary photography" (see 'Art and the End of Apartheid', Peffer, 2009, p. 254) and also set this in the context of the day:
photography can't be divorced from the political, social issues that surround us daily. As photographers we are inextricably caught up in those processes-we are not objective instruments but play a part in the way we choose to make our statements.[Quoted by Paul Weinberg, ''South Africa through the Lens: Social Documentary Photography'', Braamfontein, S. A.: Ravan Press 1983. via Krantz, David L. Politics and Photography in Apartheid South Africa. ''History of Photography'', Volume 32, Number 4. Winter 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2013.]
Members
Joseph Alfers,
Peter Auf de Hyder,
Omar Badsha
Omar Badsha (born 27 June 1945) is a South African documentary photographer, artist, political and trade union activist and an historian. He is a self-taught artist. He has exhibited his art in South Africa and internationally. In 2015 he won the ...
,
Steve Hilton Barber,
Gille de Vlieg
Gille de Vlieg (born 26 July 1940) is a photographer and anti-apartheid activist. She was born in England and moved to South Africa with her mother when she was 3 years old. During apartheid she was a member of both the Black Sash and one of the ...
,
Graham Goddard,
Dave Hartman,
Lesley Lawson,
Chris Ledochowski,
John Liebenberg,
Herbert Mabuza,
Humphrey Phakade "Pax" Magwaza,
Kentridge Matabatha,
Rafique Mayet,
Mxolise Mayo,
Vuyi Lesley Mbalo,
Peter McKenzie,
Roger Meintjies,
Eric Miller Eric, Erik, or Erick Miller may refer to:
Arts and entertainment
*Eric Miller (record producer) (c. 1941–2017), American record producer and Norman Granz's protégé
* Eric Miller (photographer) (born 1951), South African photographer during and ...
,
Santu Mofokeng
Santu Mofokeng (October 19, 1956 – January 26, 2020) was a South African news and documentary photographer who worked under the alias ''Mofokengâ''. Mofokeng was a member of the Afrapix collective and won a Prince Claus Award.Prince Claus Fund ...
,
Deseni Moodliar,
Cedric Nunn
Cedric Nunn (born 1957) is a South African photographer best known for his photography depicting the country before and after the end of apartheid.
Career
Nunn was born into a mixed-race family in Nongoma, KwaZulu, in 1957. He was raised in Hl ...
,
Billy Paddock,
Biddy Partridge,
Myron Peters,
Jeeva Rajgopaul,
Wendy Schwegmann,
Cecil Sols,
Guy Tillim,
Zubeida Vallie,
Paul Weinberg,
Gisèle Wulfsohn,
Anna Zieminski
Conflicts
The photographers put themselves at risk each time they worked, given that authority figures might beat or even shoot them.
While working in
townships
A township is a kind of human settlement or administrative subdivision, with its meaning varying in different countries.
Although the term is occasionally associated with an urban area, that tends to be an exception to the rule. In Australia, Ca ...
, their works were confiscated at times. The facilities of some Afrapix members were
pillage
Looting is the act of stealing, or the taking of goods by force, typically in the midst of a military, political, or other social crisis, such as war, natural disasters (where law and civil enforcement are temporarily ineffective), or rioting. ...
d. Surveillance by Security Police made situations difficult. Photographers could also be detained extralegally.
Since there was no single person or persons in charge of Afrapix, there were contrasts of perspectives and ideas amongst the members. Due to this, disagreements occurred and the eventual split between the more political side and the individual documentary side, which would later be called
Southlight.
There were also many criticisms of the Afrapix movement. It was viewed negatively by some who thought the group only showed black Africans as powerless. Various Afrapix photographers themselves said they felt pressured to fulfill
stereotype
In social psychology, a stereotype is a generalized belief about a particular category of people. It is an expectation that people might have about every person of a particular group. The type of expectation can vary; it can be, for exampl ...
s through their images.
Projects
* Omar Badsha, ed. ''South Africa: The cordoned heart: Essays.'' Cape Town: Gallery Press; New York: Norton, 1986. .
[Four photographs from this are show]
here
* Omar Badsha et al, eds. ''Beyond the barricades: Popular resistance in South Africa: Photographs by twenty South African photographers.'' New York: Aperture, 1989. .
* Victor Levie, ed. ''De Verborgen camera: Zuidafrikaanse fotografie aan de censuur ontkomen'' = ''Hidden Camera: South African Photography Escaped from Censorship.'' Amsterdam: Stichting CASA, 1989. .
* Wendy Davies, ''We Cry for our Land: Farmworkers in South Africa''. Oxfam 1990.
* Susannah Smith, ''Front Line Africa: The Right to a Future''. Oxfam 1990.
Notes
References
External links
Afrapix – SA HistoryCedric NunnApartheid – South Africa{Dead link, date=May 2019 , bot=InternetArchiveBot , fix-attempted=yes
Photographer autonomy and images of resistance: the case of South Africa during the 1980sSouth Africa: Photographing Apartheid, Felix FeaturesPhotography and the Liberation Struggle in South Africa, South African History Online
South African photography organisations
1980s in South Africa
1982 establishments in South Africa
1991 disestablishments in South Africa
Photojournalism organizations
Photo agencies
Anti-Apartheid organisations
Cooperatives in Africa