"Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life" explores the significance of the 50-year civil rights struggle, from how apartheid defined and marked South Africa's identity from 1948 to 1994, to the rise of Mandela, and finally its lasting impact on society. It includes the work of nearly 70 photographers, artists, and filmmakers.
Curated by Okwui Enwezor with Rory Bester
On view from September 14, 2012 – January 6, 2013 at the International Center of Photography (1133
Avenue of the Americas at 43rd Street), Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of
Everyday Life offers an unprecedented and comprehensive historical overview of the pictorial response to
apartheid that has never been undertaken by any other museum. Through its images, this exhibition explores
the significance of the 50-year civil rights struggle, from how apartheid defined and marked South Africa’s
identity from 1948 to 1994, to the rise of Nelson Mandela, and finally its lasting impact on society.
Curated by Okwui Enwezor with Rory Bester and based on more than six years of research, the exhibition
examines the aesthetic power of the documentary form – from the photo essay to reportage, social
documentary to photojournalism and art – in recording, analyzing, articulating, and confronting the legacy of
apartheid and its effect on everyday life in South Africa.
Apartheid, the compound Dutch word meaning separate (apart) and neighborhood (heid), was the political
platform of Afrikaner nationalism before and after World War II. It created a political system designed
specifically to promote racial segregation and enshrine white domination. In 1948, after the surprise victory
of the Afrikaner National Party, apartheid was introduced as official state policy and organized across a
widespread series of legislative programs.
Over time, the system of apartheid grew increasingly ruthless and violent towards Africans and other non-
white communities. It not only transformed the modern political meaning of citizenship, it invented a wholly
new society in both fact and law. The result was a reorganization of civic, economic, and political structures
that penetrated even the most mundane aspects of social existence – from housing, public amenities,
and transportation, to education, tourism, religion, and businesses. Apartheid transformed institutions,
maintaining them for the sole purpose of denying and depriving Africans, Coloureds, and Asians of their
basic civil rights.
A central premise of this exhibition is that South African photography, as we know it today, was essentially
invented in 1948. The exhibition argues that the rise of the Afrikaner National Party to political power and its
introduction of apartheid as the legal foundation of governance changed the pictorial perception of the country
from a purely colonial space based on racial segregation to a highly contested space based on the ideals
of equality, democracy, and civil rights. Photography was almost instantaneously alert to this change and in
turn transformed its own visual language from a purely anthropological tool to a social instrument. Because
of this, no one else photographed South Africa and the struggle against apartheid better, more critically and
incisively, with deep pictorial complexity, and penetrating insight than South African photographers. It is the
goal if this exhibition to explore and pay tribute to their exceptional photographic achievement.
Encompassing the entire museum, including the exterior windows at ICP, this landmark exhibition includes
the work of nearly 70 photographers, artists, and filmmakers. Complex, vivid, evocative and dramatic, Rise
and Fall of Apartheid covers more than 60 years of powerful photographic and visual production that form
part of the historical record of modern South African identity. Accompanied by more than 500 photographs,
artworks, films, videos, documents, posters, and periodicals, the exhibition brings together a rich tapestry
of material, many of which have been rarely shown together, to examine and document one of the most
absorbing historical eras of the 20th century.
From the work of members Drum Magazine in the 1950s to the Afrapix Collective in the 1980s to the
reportage of the so-called Bang Bang Club, included in the exhibition are the exceptional works of pioneering
South African photographers including Leon Levson, Eli Weinberg, David Goldblatt, Peter Magubane, Alf
Khumalo, Jürgen Schadeberg, Sam Nzima, Ernest Cole, George Hallet, Omar Badsha, Gideon Mendel, Paul
Weinberg, Kevin Carter, Joao Silva, and Greg Marinovich, and the responses of contemporary artists such
as Adrian Piper, Sue Williamson, Jo Ractliffe, Jane Alexander, Santu Mofokeng, Guy Tillim, Hans Haacke,
and William Kentridge. In addition, the exhibition will feature the works of a new generation of South African
photographers such as Sabelo Mlangeni and Thabiso Sekgale, who explore the impact of apartheid as it
continues to resonate today.
Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life is made possible with support
from Mark McCain and Caro Macdonald/Eye and I, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the
National Endowment for the Arts, Joseph and Joan Cullman Foundation for the Arts, Deborah Jerome and
Peter Guggenheimer, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council,
and from the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation in honor of 30 years of committed ICP service by Willis E.
Hartshorn.
About the Curators
Okwui Enwezor is Director of Haus der Kunst, Munich. Before joining Haus der Kunst, Enwezor was Adjunct
Curator at ICP and Dean of Academic Affairs and Senior Vice President at San Francisco Art Institute. Most
recently he was the Artistic Director of La Triennale 2012 at Palais de Tokyo, Paris, and has served as the
Artistic Director of the 2nd Johannesburg Biennale (1997), Documenta 11 (2002), and 7th Gwangju Biennale
(2008) amongst many other international exhibitions. Enwezor served as the Kirk Varnedoe Visiting Professor
at Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. He is the founding publisher and editor of Nka: Journal of
Contemporary African Art.
Rory Bester is an art historian and critic, as well as a curator and documentary filmmaker. Based at the
Wits School of Arts in Johannesburg, his teaching and research areas include archive and museum
practice, curatorial studies, exhibition histories, migration and diaspora studies, photographic histories,
postcolonialism, and post-war South African art. He regularly writes art criticism for the Mail and Guardian
newspaper, as well as for Art South Africa, Camera Austria and Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art.
Bester has curated and co-curated a number of exhibitions in Denmark, Germany, South Africa, Sweden and
the United States.
About ICP
The International Center of Photography (ICP) was founded in 1974 by Cornell Capa (1918-2008) as an
institution dedicated to photography that occupies a vital and central place in contemporary culture as it
reflects and influences social change. Through our museum, school and community programs, we embrace
photography’s ability to open new opportunities for personal and aesthetic expression, transform popular
culture, and continually evolve to incorporate new technologies. ICP has presented more than 500 exhibitions,
bringing the work of more than 3,000 photographers and other artists to the public in one-person and group
exhibitions and provided thousands of classes and workshops that have enriched tens of thousands of
students. Visit www.icp.org for more information.
Image: Jodi Beiber, Protest against Chris Hani’s assassination, 1993. © Goodman Gallery Johannesburg.
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Media Preview: September 14, 2012 9:30–11:30 am
The International Center of Photography (ICP)
1133 Avenue of the Americas at 43 rd Street New York NY
Hours
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Thursday–Friday: 10 am–8 pm
Saturday–Sunday: 10 am–6 pm
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Admission
General Admission: $14
Students and Seniors (with valid ID): $10
ICP Members: Free
Children under 12: Free
Voluntary Contribution Fridays 5–8 pm
Free Friday night programs in the Museum are made possible, in part, by public funds from City Council Speaker Christine Quinn and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.