Ways of Seeing: South African and International Photography
Live Virtual Auction, 18 September 2024
Ways of Seeing: South African and International Photography
About the SessionWays of Seeing: South African and International Photography showcases a collection of works that take a critical approach to photography, layered with themes of personhood, subjectivity and community.
The sale features works from distinct collections by passionate collectors with a discerning eye and deep engagement with art – featuring The Gary Eisenberg Collection, part of the Linda Givon Collection, works from The Photographic Archival and Preservation Association as well as a group of contemporary African artists who have made a significant mark within the medium of photography including, Zanele Muholi, Mary Sibande, Kudzanai Chiurai, Pieter Hugo and Nandipha Mntambo, among others.
With a title that pays homage to a great thinker, John Berger, Ways of Seeing: South African and International Photography challenges traditional notions of the gaze, inviting us to engage the human experience through images of nude physical forms, intimate portraits, landscapes and depictions of the environment. The sale is a meditation on the ethics of seeing, often fraught with complexity and contestation.
It highlights the diversity within both local and global photographic traditions through an array of works, with significant contributions from African photographers alongside globally renowned artists such as Bill Brandt (British), Nan Goldin (American), Bettina Rheims (French), Sebastião Salgado (Brazilian), Viviane Sassen (Dutch), Wolfgang Tillmans (German), Joel-Peter Witkin (American), André Kertész (Hungarian), Roman Vishniac (Russian-American), and Youssef Nabil (Egyptian).
A significant portion of Ways of Seeing: South African and International Photography is drawn from The Gary Eisenberg Collection following the tragic and untimely passing of Gary earlier this year. This inclusion comes with immense gratitude from Gary’s wife, Dominique Eisenberg.
About this Item
signed, dated 2002, numbered 3/12 and inscribed with the title and 'Kunhinga, Angola' in pencil in the margin
Literature
DaimlerChrysler South Africa (ed) (2004) Guy Tillim, Pretoria: DaimlerChrysler Award for South African Photography, illustrated in black and white on page 87.
Johannesburg Art Gallery (2007) Africa Remix: Contemporary Art of a Continent, exhibition catalogue, Johannesburg: Johannesburg Art Gallery, another example from the edition illustrated in colour on page 82.
Exhibited
Stevenson, Cape Town, Kunhinga portraits, 18 June to 19 July 2003, another example from the edition exhibited.
Provenance
The Gary Eisenberg Collection.
Notes
"Taken in February 2002 in the Angolan province of Bie, near Kuito, Guy Tillim's Kunhinga portraits portray displaced people, who in the months before the end of the civil war, fled in advance of the Angolan government's "clearing" of regions where civilians had provided cover for UNITA soldiers. The subjects had walked for five days from Monge to seek refuge in the small town of Kunhinga in the safe havens provided by foreign agencies stationed in the area"1
1. Michael Stevenson (no date) Guy Tillim: Kunhinga Portraits, online, https://archive.stevenson.info/exhibitions/kunhinga/kunhinga.htm, accessed 25 August 2024.