Peter Magubane

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Peter Magubane (born 1932) is a South African photographer.

Overview

He was born in Vrededorp, now Pageview, a suburb in Johannesburg and grew up in Sophiatown. He started taking some photographs using a Kodak Brownie box camera as a schoolboy.

In 1954 he read a copy of Drum, a magazine known for its reporting of urban blacks and the effects of apartheid. They were dealing with social issues that affected black people in South Africa. I wanted to be part of that magazine. [1]

He started at Drum as a driver. After six months of odd jobs, he was given a photography assignment under the mentorship of Jürgen Schadeberg, the chief photographer. He borrowed a camera and covered the 1955 ANC convention. I went back to the office with good results and never looked back.

Being on assignment in the early years wasn't easy. We were not allowed to carry a camera in the open if the police were involved, so I often had to hide my camera to get the pictures I wanted. On occasion I hid my camera in a hollowed-out Bible, firing with a cable release in my pocket. At another time, at a trial in Zeerust from which the press were banned, I hid my Leica 3G in a hollowed-out loaf of bread and pretended to eat while I was actually shooting pictures; when the bread went down, I bought milk and hid the camera in the carton. And I got away with it. You had to think fast and be fast to survive in those days. [2]

Magubane photographed most of South Africa's historic moments e.g. Mandela's Rivonia trial in 1964 and also Sharpeville in 1960. He later recalled I had never seen so many dead people. His editor wanted to know why he hadn't taken any close-ups. Magubane then decided I was not going to get emotionally involved, or at least not until after I have done my work. [3]

He left Drum to become a freelancer. In 1967, he was employed by the Rand Daily Mail. In 1969, he was sent to photograph a demonstration outside Winnie Mandela's jail cell. He was arrested, interrogated and then put in solitary confinement. The charges were dropped in 1970. However, Magubane was banned from photography for five years. In 1971 he was imprisoned again and spent 98 days in solitary confinement and then spent six months in jail.

Following his release, Mugabane was assigned to cover the Soweto riots which occurred from June through to August 1976. He was arrested, beaten up and had his nose broken. Eventually, he was released at the end of 1976. The series of pictures he took bought him international recognition and acclaim.

This led to other opportunities. He worked on assignments for Time magazine, the UN and for Sports Illustrated (where he photographed a series about the teenage runner Zola Budd). [2]

In 2005, Magubane spent time in hospital recovering from buckshot wounds received when he was caught in police crossfire at a funeral near Johannesburg. [4]

In 2006, the South African Post Office issued a miniature sheet, commemorative envelope and a special canceller on National Women's Day. This commemorates the march on 9 August 1956 when 20,000 women from all parts of South Africa staged a second march on the Union Buildings to protest against the pass laws. They left petitions containing more than 100,000 signatures at the Prime Minister's door. The photograph used on the miniature sheet was taken by Peter Magubane during the march and features some of the women who led the 1956 march: Lilian Ngoyi, Helen Joseph, Sophia Williams-De Bruyn and Rahima Moosa. [5]

Lately, Magubane has stopped doing photojournalism and has concentrated on art photography. He is concentrating on documenting the surviving tribal ways in post-apartheid South Africa in colour. These have been published under the African Heritage Series banner.

Books

  • Black as I am / Zindzi Mandela and Peter Magubane ; foreword Andrew Young, Los Angeles : Guild of Tutors Press, 1978, ISBN 0-89-615001-1
  • Magubane's South Africa / by Peter Magubane ; with a foreword by Ambassador Andrew Young, Alfred A. Knopf, 1978, ISBN 0-43-627120-6
  • Soweto / photographed by Peter Magubane ; text, Marshall Lee ; contributing and picture editor, Dawn Lindberg, Nelson, 1978, ISBN 0-90-923832-4
  • Soweto speaks / Jill Johnson, photographs by Peter Magubane, A. D. Donker, 1979, ISBN 0-94-993763-0
  • Black child, Random House, 1982, ISBN 0-39-451445-9
  • Soweto : the fruit of fear, Africa World Press, 1986, ISBN 0-86-543040-3
  • June 16 : the fruit of fear, Skotaville, 1986, ISBN 0-94-700913-2
  • Nelson Mandela : man of destiny : a pictorial biography, Don Nelson, 1996, ISBN 1-86-806123-X
  • Vanishing cultures of South Africa : changing customs in a changing world, Struik, 1998, ISBN 1-86-825967-6
  • African Renaissance, 2000, ISBN 1-86-872413-1
  • African Heritage Series: Homesteads, Peter Magubane, text by Sandra Klopper,2001, ISBN 9-78-186872517-5
  • African Heritage Series: Dress and Adornment, Peter Magubane, text by Sandra Klopper, 2001, ISBN 9-78-186872514-4
  • African Heritage Series – Ceremonies, Peter Magubane, text by Sandra Klopper, 2001, ISBN 1-86-872515-4
  • Soweto, Peter Magubane and Charlene Smith, 2001, ISBN 1-86-872584-7
  • African Heritage Series - Arts and Crafts, Peter Magubane, text by Sandra Klopper, 2001, ISBN 1-86-872836-6
  • The BaNtwane, Peter Magubane, text by Sandra Klopper, 2001, ISBN 1-86-872564-2
  • AmaNdebele / Peter Magubane, text by Sandra Klopper, Sunbird, 2005, ISBN 1-91-993806-0

Film and video

  • BBC Millennium diaries - Peter Magubane Photographer. "Having recorded the turbulent events in South Africa over the past 45 years on camera he tells of the journey to his homeland of today". [6]

Solo Exhibitions

Selected group exhibitions

Awards

  • 1958 - First black South African to win a photographic prize in the country – first and third prizes were awarded to him for Best Press pictures of the year. [5]
  • 1986 - Robert Capa Award
  • 1992 - Special Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism
  • 1995 - Martin Luther King Luthuli Award
  • 1997 - Lifetime Achievement Award from the Mother Jones Foundation and Leica Cameras
  • 1997 - Fellowship by the Tom Hopkinson School of Journalism and Cultural Studies, University of Wales, Cardiff
  • 1999 - Order for Meritorious Service Class II from President Mandela
  • 2003 - Honorary doctorate degree from the University of South Africa

External links

References

  1. ^ Cook, John (1997-05-01). "One-Man Truth Squad". Mother Jones. Retrieved 2007-05-07. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ a b Barbieri, Fabio (2003-05-07). "Peter Magubane : profiles". Contemporary Africa Database. Retrieved 2007-05-07. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ Weil, Louis (1990-26-02). "From the Publisher". Time magazine. Time. Retrieved 2007-05-07. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  4. ^ Meyer, John (2005-05-12). "A Letter from the Publisher". Time magazine. Time. Retrieved 2007-05-07. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  5. ^ a b "50th Anniversary of the Women's March to the Union Buildings". Customer Services. SA Post Office. Retrieved 2007-05-04. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  6. ^ "Peter Magubane". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 2007-05-04. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)