Traveling Exhibitions

 

See All Exhibitions


American Art and Artists

Posing Beauty In
African American Culture

Sally Mann:
The Family and The Land

Paul Outerbridge:
New Color Photographs
from Mexico and California

Stefan Sagmeister: Things I have learned in my life

Yosuf Karsh:
Regarding Heroes


Modern/Contemporary Art

Uncanny Likeness: The
Contemporary Self-Portrait

Artists, Poets & Intimates:
Portraits of a Life
by Françoise Gilot

Modern Photography of the
Russian Avant-Garde

Almost Alice: New Illustrations of Wonderland by Maggie Taylor

The Great Picture

Cuba Avant-Garde:
Contemporary Cuban Art from the Farber Collection

Book of Lies:
Volumes I, II, and III

André Kertész: On Reading


Artist Retrospectives

Mythopoetic Seeing:
Twenty-Five Years of Photographs
by Elisabeth Sunday

SAGA: The Journey of
Arno Rafael Minkkinen
Thirty-Five Years of Photographs


Architecture/Decorative Art

Peter Shire: Chairs

Julius Shulman:
Desert Modern

Hollyock House and
Olive Hill:
Frank Lloyd Wright and
Edmund Teske


History and Culture

E. O. Hoppé:
The Indian Subcontinent
on the Cusp of Change

The Black & White Fifties:
South Africa Photographs by Jurgen Schadeberg

number of works:
60

frame sizes:
20 x 26 to 27 x 37 inches

space requirements:
250–275 linear feet

tour dates:
Summer 2008–2010

participation fee:
$7,500 for 6–8 weeks

support materials:
The Black & White Fifties, Jurgen Schadeberg’s South Africa. Protea Book House, 2001

Have You Seen Drum Lately? (Video/77min)
A unique social documentary capturing
the kaleidoscope of black South African life in the fifties and the impact of apartheid on their lives.

War and Peace
(Video/60 min).
The history of the ANC from 1900–1994.

see booking information

 


The Black & White Fifties:
Photographs by Jurgen Schadeberg


When Jurgen Schadeberg arrived in South Africa in 1950 from Germany he found two societies running parallel, but entirely separate. There was an invisible wall between two worlds—The Black World and The White World.

In the fifties the black world was becoming culturally and politically dynamic, whereas the white world seemed to be isolated, cocooned, colonial and ignorant of the black world. As a newcomer and outsider, Schadeberg managed to move easily from one world to the other, photographing scenes as varied as a white masked ball in the City Hall, an African National Congress defiance campaign meeting, a Shebeen (illicit bar or club) in Sophiatown, and the Durban July Horse Race.

The political campaigns against Apartheid Laws in the early fifties were surprisingly peaceful, from a contemporary perspective. There was an almost gentlemanly attitude between the government officials or Special Branch police and the political demonstrators. On one occasion a speaker standing at a political meeting even stopped his speech so that the Special Branch officer could reload his tape recorder, recalls Schadeberg. “We all believed that the Apartheid regime would not last, which, in a way, explains the naive enthusiasm which I think is portrayed in many of my pictures.” It was only in the late fifties and early sixties that clashes became more violent and more brutal.

Schadeberg freelanced for a number of magazines and photo agencies during the fifties, including Drum, Time Life, and SABC Radio, as well as selling many of his photographs to German, French and American publications.


Image:

KES students during sorts festival in Johannesburg, 1959

 

_Request a Booking

  I am interested in booking this exhibition
*Dates requested:
*FirstName:
*LastName:
Position:
   
Organization:
*Phone:
*Email:
 
Comments:
(Please wait for response message after hitting submit.)
 

email | call Robin McCarthy at 626.577.9696 extension 300