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Ernest Cole (photographer)

Ernest Levi Tsoloane Cole (21 March 1940[1] – 19 February 1990) was a South African photographer. In the early 1960s, he started to freelance for clients such as Drum magazine, the Rand Daily Mail, and the Sunday Express. This made him South Africa's first black freelance photographer.[2][3]

Ernest Cole
Born
Ernest Levi Tsoloane Cole

21 March 1940
Eersterust, Pretoria, South Africa
Died19 February 1990(1990-02-19) (aged 49)
EducationWolsey Hall, Oxford, correspondence course
OccupationPhotographer
Known forSouth Africa's first black freelance photographer
Notable workHouse of Bondage (1967)

Early life edit

Cole was a black South African, born in Eersterust in Pretoria, in 1940. His original family name was Kole and he later took the name Cole.[1] He left school when the Bantu Education Act was put into place in 1953, and instead completed his diploma via a correspondence course with Wolsey Hall, Oxford.[4] He started taking photographs at a very young age, eight years old, and in the 1950s, he was given a camera by a Roman Catholic priest, with which Cole broadened his portfolio. As he himself put it: "I quit school in 1957 rather than go along with the 'bantu' education for servitude which had become more strict than before."[5]

Career edit

In 1958, he applied for a job with Drum magazine. Jürgen Schadeberg, the picture editor, employed him as his assistant.[6] Cole also started a correspondence course with the New York Institute of Photography.

While working for Drum, Cole began to mingle with other talented young black South Africans—journalists, photographers, jazz musicians, and political leaders in the burgeoning anti-apartheid movement—and became radicalised in his political views. He soon decided on a project that entailed recording the evils and daily social effects of apartheid.

He then worked at the Bantu World newspaper (later renamed The World – now The Sowetan), where he continued his career as a photographer.

Seeking to leave South Africa, he became re-classified as a "Coloured," not "Black" because he was able to fool the authorities.[1] As a result, he was able to leave for New York City in 1966. He secretly took his apartheid project prints with him.[7] He showed his work to Magnum Photos and this resulted in a publishing deal with publishing rights owned by Random House. The resulting book, House of Bondage (1967),[8] was banned in South Africa.

In the book, Cole writes: "Three-hundred years of white supremacy in South Africa have placed us in bondage, stripped us of our dignity, robbed us of our self-esteem and surrounded us with hate."[9]

Later, Cole received a grant from the Ford Foundation for another book, A study of the Negro family in the rural South and the Negro family in the urban ghetto. Although he took a large number of photographs, this project was never completed nor were additional books published.[2] As of 2020, photographs from this series began to be scanned and published.[10]

Cole subsequently moved to Sweden, where he took up filmmaking. The apartheid photos he had taken were extensively used by the ANC in their various publications.

Death edit

Cole died of cancer in New York City on 18 February 1990 at the age of 49.[11]

Photographic legacy edit

Cole's negatives were considered lost for a long time, but a collection of 60,000 negatives was found at a bank vault in Stockholm and, in April 2018, given to his heirs, who had founded The Ernest Cole Family Trust. There are still 504 photographs held at Hasselblad Foundation, with an estimated value over one million euros, and the ownership of these is in legal dispute.[1] As of 2020, the legal dispute between Cole's estate and the Hasselblad Foundation is ongoing.[12][13]

A cache of Cole's work having resurfaced in 2017,[14] his book House of Bondage was reissued in 2022 by Aperture in New York, including a new preface by Mongane Wally Serote and "a selection of previously unseen photographs of creative expression and cultural activity in Black communities; a useful corrective to the uniform view of oppression and subjugation that had been its focus."[15]

Ernest Cole Award edit

The annual Ernest Cole Award was initiated in 2011 under the auspices of the University of Cape Town.[16][17]

Publications edit

  • House of Bondage: A South African Black Man Exposes in His Own Pictures and Words the Bitter Life of His Homeland Today. New York: Random House, 1967. ISBN 0-394-42935-4. With an introduction by Joseph Lelyveld and a text by Thomas Flaherty.
  • The Photographer. Göttingen, Germany: Steidl, 2010. Edited by Gunilla Knape. ISBN 978-3-86930-137-2. With essays by Struan Robertson and Ivor Powel.

Documentaries edit

  • 2006: Ernest Cole – Video (52 minutes). "This is the story of the first black photojournalist to challenge South Africa's apartheid system. Risking imprisonment, Ernest Cole dedicated his life to showing the world the injustices and exploitation of segregation. But he paid a heavy price for his work and ended up dying in exile."[18][19]

Collections edit

Cole's work is held in the following public collections:

Exhibitions edit

  • Photo-journalism exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London[23]
  • Life Under Apartheid at the Apartheid Museum, Johannesburg[24]
  • eye Africa (1960 to 1998) at the Castle's William Fehr Collection, Cape Town[25]
  • Colour this Whites Only at the Tate Museum in London[26]
  • 2001 – Soweto – A South African Myth – Photographs from the 1950s (by Alf Khumalo, Ernest Cole and Jürgen Schadeberg). The core of the exhibition was the student uprising of 1976. This includes some of Peter Magubane's work.
  • 2010 – Ernest Cole: Photographer – Although not the first, this was the largest retrospective of his work displayed in Johannesburg at the Johannesburg Art Gallery. The exhibition was a homecoming of sorts for Cole's legacy, as many of his photographs previously had been banned in apartheid South Africa.[27][28]
  • 2012 – Everything Was Moving: Photography from the 60s and 70s – This exhibition at The Barbican Centre, London, contained a set of original prints by Ernest Cole long thought lost, but rediscovered in Sweden. The exhibition also contained a major body of work on South Africa by David Goldblatt.[29]
  • 2014 – Ernest Cole: Photographer – This exhibition was at the Grey Art Gallery of New York University in New York City.[30][31][32] It featured more than 100 rare black-and-white gelatin silver prints from Cole's archive. This was the first major solo museum show of Cole's images. The exhibition was organised by the Hasselblad Foundation of Gothenburg, Sweden.
  • 2023 – House of Bondage – Exhibition at foam gallery Amsterdam, The Netherlands, with pictures of a previously unpublished archive of work by Ernest Cole.[33]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Selander, Torbjörn (22 July 2018). "Lång kamp om Ernest Coles fotografier" [Long battle over Ernest Cole's photographs]. Hufvudstadsbladet (in Swedish). pp. 22–25.
  2. ^ a b . SA History. Archived from the original on 20 October 2007. Retrieved 2 December 2007.
  3. ^ O'Hagan, Sean: Review of Ernest Cole: Photographer by Gunilla Knape & Struan Robertson. The Observer, 23 January 2011.
  4. ^ Bianucci, Miller. "Looking at Power: The Relevance of Apartheid Photography Today". LensCulture.
  5. ^ Cole, Ernest: "My Country, My Hell!", Ebony, February 1968, p. 68.
  6. ^ Naggar, Carole: "Ernest Cole, photographer of apartheid." Al Jazeera, 2 September 2014.
  7. ^ Randall, Dudley: Review of House of Bondage, Negro Digest, February 1968, p. 94.
  8. ^ "House of Bondage". protestinphotobook.com.
  9. ^ Cole, Ernest (1967). House of Bondage. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-394-42935-4.
  10. ^ Smith, Tymon (21 August 2020). . New Frame. Archived from the original on 22 April 2022. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  11. ^ "Ernest Cole Dies at 49; Recorder of Apartheid". The New York Times. 19 February 1990. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  12. ^ Smith, Tymon (20 February 2020). "Part one - The mystery of Ernest Cole's archive". New Frame. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  13. ^ Smith, Tymon (20 August 2020). . New Frame. Archived from the original on 22 April 2022. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  14. ^ "Ernest Cole's Defiant View of Apartheid". The New Yorker. December 2022. Retrieved 8 December 2022.
  15. ^ Sey, James (6 December 2022). "'House Of Bondage' by Ernest Cole reissued by Aperture". Wanted. Retrieved 8 December 2022.
  16. ^ "The Ernest Cole Annual Photography Award." Africultures, March 2011.
  17. ^ "About the Award" Ernest Cole Award website. Retrieved 8 December 2022.
  18. ^ Documentaries: South Africa – Ernest Cole, Journeyman Pictures.
  19. ^ "Ernest Cole Documentary" (review), Johannesburg City Bytes.
  20. ^ "Ernest Cole, The Art Institute of Chicago". The Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  21. ^ "Ernest Cole". Retrieved 10 January 2018.
  22. ^ "Ernest Cole – Display at Tate Modern".
  23. ^ "Photographers in This Display". Victoria & Albert Museum. Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  24. ^ . Apartheid Museum. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  25. ^ "African Photography 1840–1998". The Castle. Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  26. ^ "Colour this Whites Only". Tate Britain. Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  27. ^ Dugger, Celia W. (17 November 2010). "Ernest Cole: Photographer". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
  28. ^ "Life through a lens: Ernest Cole photographs shed light on apartheid". The Guardian. 25 November 2010. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  29. ^ "Everything Was Moving: Photography from the 60s and 70s". The Barbican Centre. Retrieved 4 November 2012.
  30. ^ Cotter, Holland (11 September 2014). "Capturing Apartheid's Daily Indignity". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  31. ^ . 11 November 2014. Archived from the original on 11 November 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  32. ^ Kermeliotis, Teo (12 September 2014). "Ernest Cole: Brave photographer who exposed horrors of apartheid from within". CNN. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  33. ^ "Ernest Cole - House of Bondage | Foam: all about photography". www.foam.org. Retrieved 27 March 2023.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Harmsen, Monica: "Ernest Cole", a presentation on the life of Ernest Cole at YouTube.
  • "Apartheid Through the Eyes of One of South Africa's First Black Photojournalists." The Leonard Lopate Show, 30 September 2014.
  • "Ernest Cole’s secret archive – in pictures". Photo story by The Guardian, March 2023

ernest, cole, photographer, other, people, named, ernest, cole, ernest, cole, disambiguation, ernest, levi, tsoloane, cole, march, 1940, february, 1990, south, african, photographer, early, 1960s, started, freelance, clients, such, drum, magazine, rand, daily,. For other people named Ernest Cole see Ernest Cole disambiguation Ernest Levi Tsoloane Cole 21 March 1940 1 19 February 1990 was a South African photographer In the early 1960s he started to freelance for clients such as Drum magazine the Rand Daily Mail and the Sunday Express This made him South Africa s first black freelance photographer 2 3 Ernest ColeBornErnest Levi Tsoloane Cole21 March 1940Eersterust Pretoria South AfricaDied19 February 1990 1990 02 19 aged 49 New York City U S EducationWolsey Hall Oxford correspondence courseOccupationPhotographerKnown forSouth Africa s first black freelance photographerNotable workHouse of Bondage 1967 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Death 4 Photographic legacy 5 Ernest Cole Award 6 Publications 7 Documentaries 8 Collections 9 Exhibitions 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editCole was a black South African born in Eersterust in Pretoria in 1940 His original family name was Kole and he later took the name Cole 1 He left school when the Bantu Education Act was put into place in 1953 and instead completed his diploma via a correspondence course with Wolsey Hall Oxford 4 He started taking photographs at a very young age eight years old and in the 1950s he was given a camera by a Roman Catholic priest with which Cole broadened his portfolio As he himself put it I quit school in 1957 rather than go along with the bantu education for servitude which had become more strict than before 5 Career editIn 1958 he applied for a job with Drum magazine Jurgen Schadeberg the picture editor employed him as his assistant 6 Cole also started a correspondence course with the New York Institute of Photography While working for Drum Cole began to mingle with other talented young black South Africans journalists photographers jazz musicians and political leaders in the burgeoning anti apartheid movement and became radicalised in his political views He soon decided on a project that entailed recording the evils and daily social effects of apartheid He then worked at the Bantu World newspaper later renamed The World now The Sowetan where he continued his career as a photographer Seeking to leave South Africa he became re classified as a Coloured not Black because he was able to fool the authorities 1 As a result he was able to leave for New York City in 1966 He secretly took his apartheid project prints with him 7 He showed his work to Magnum Photos and this resulted in a publishing deal with publishing rights owned by Random House The resulting book House of Bondage 1967 8 was banned in South Africa In the book Cole writes Three hundred years of white supremacy in South Africa have placed us in bondage stripped us of our dignity robbed us of our self esteem and surrounded us with hate 9 Later Cole received a grant from the Ford Foundation for another book A study of the Negro family in the rural South and the Negro family in the urban ghetto Although he took a large number of photographs this project was never completed nor were additional books published 2 As of 2020 photographs from this series began to be scanned and published 10 Cole subsequently moved to Sweden where he took up filmmaking The apartheid photos he had taken were extensively used by the ANC in their various publications Death editCole died of cancer in New York City on 18 February 1990 at the age of 49 11 Photographic legacy editCole s negatives were considered lost for a long time but a collection of 60 000 negatives was found at a bank vault in Stockholm and in April 2018 given to his heirs who had founded The Ernest Cole Family Trust There are still 504 photographs held at Hasselblad Foundation with an estimated value over one million euros and the ownership of these is in legal dispute 1 As of 2020 the legal dispute between Cole s estate and the Hasselblad Foundation is ongoing 12 13 A cache of Cole s work having resurfaced in 2017 14 his book House of Bondage was reissued in 2022 by Aperture in New York including a new preface by Mongane Wally Serote and a selection of previously unseen photographs of creative expression and cultural activity in Black communities a useful corrective to the uniform view of oppression and subjugation that had been its focus 15 Ernest Cole Award editThe annual Ernest Cole Award was initiated in 2011 under the auspices of the University of Cape Town 16 17 Publications editHouse of Bondage A South African Black Man Exposes in His Own Pictures and Words the Bitter Life of His Homeland Today New York Random House 1967 ISBN 0 394 42935 4 With an introduction by Joseph Lelyveld and a text by Thomas Flaherty The Photographer Gottingen Germany Steidl 2010 Edited by Gunilla Knape ISBN 978 3 86930 137 2 With essays by Struan Robertson and Ivor Powel Documentaries edit2006 Ernest Cole Video 52 minutes This is the story of the first black photojournalist to challenge South Africa s apartheid system Risking imprisonment Ernest Cole dedicated his life to showing the world the injustices and exploitation of segregation But he paid a heavy price for his work and ended up dying in exile 18 19 Collections editCole s work is held in the following public collections The Art Institute of Chicago Chicago Illinois 12 items 20 Museum of Modern Art New York New York 41 items 21 Tate Modern London 19 items 22 Exhibitions editPhoto journalism exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum London 23 Life Under Apartheid at the Apartheid Museum Johannesburg 24 eye Africa 1960 to 1998 at the Castle s William Fehr Collection Cape Town 25 Colour this Whites Only at the Tate Museum in London 26 2001 Soweto A South African Myth Photographs from the 1950s by Alf Khumalo Ernest Cole and Jurgen Schadeberg The core of the exhibition was the student uprising of 1976 This includes some of Peter Magubane s work 2010 Ernest Cole Photographer Although not the first this was the largest retrospective of his work displayed in Johannesburg at the Johannesburg Art Gallery The exhibition was a homecoming of sorts for Cole s legacy as many of his photographs previously had been banned in apartheid South Africa 27 28 2012 Everything Was Moving Photography from the 60s and 70s This exhibition at The Barbican Centre London contained a set of original prints by Ernest Cole long thought lost but rediscovered in Sweden The exhibition also contained a major body of work on South Africa by David Goldblatt 29 2014 Ernest Cole Photographer This exhibition was at the Grey Art Gallery of New York University in New York City 30 31 32 It featured more than 100 rare black and white gelatin silver prints from Cole s archive This was the first major solo museum show of Cole s images The exhibition was organised by the Hasselblad Foundation of Gothenburg Sweden 2023 House of Bondage Exhibition at foam gallery Amsterdam The Netherlands with pictures of a previously unpublished archive of work by Ernest Cole 33 References edit a b c d Selander Torbjorn 22 July 2018 Lang kamp om Ernest Coles fotografier Long battle over Ernest Cole s photographs Hufvudstadsbladet in Swedish pp 22 25 a b Ernest Cole SA History Archived from the original on 20 October 2007 Retrieved 2 December 2007 O Hagan Sean Review of Ernest Cole Photographer by Gunilla Knape amp Struan Robertson The Observer 23 January 2011 Bianucci Miller Looking at Power The Relevance of Apartheid Photography Today LensCulture Cole Ernest My Country My Hell Ebony February 1968 p 68 Naggar Carole Ernest Cole photographer of apartheid Al Jazeera 2 September 2014 Randall Dudley Review of House of Bondage Negro Digest February 1968 p 94 House of Bondage protestinphotobook com Cole Ernest 1967 House of Bondage New York Random House ISBN 0 394 42935 4 Smith Tymon 21 August 2020 Ernest Cole s unseen photographs New Frame Archived from the original on 22 April 2022 Retrieved 22 April 2022 Ernest Cole Dies at 49 Recorder of Apartheid The New York Times 19 February 1990 Retrieved 13 September 2022 Smith Tymon 20 February 2020 Part one The mystery of Ernest Cole s archive New Frame Retrieved 22 April 2022 Smith Tymon 20 August 2020 Part two The mystery of Ernest Cole s archive New Frame Archived from the original on 22 April 2022 Retrieved 22 April 2022 Ernest Cole s Defiant View of Apartheid The New Yorker December 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2022 Sey James 6 December 2022 House Of Bondage by Ernest Cole reissued by Aperture Wanted Retrieved 8 December 2022 The Ernest Cole Annual Photography Award Africultures March 2011 About the Award Ernest Cole Award website Retrieved 8 December 2022 Documentaries South Africa Ernest Cole Journeyman Pictures Ernest Cole Documentary review Johannesburg City Bytes Ernest Cole The Art Institute of Chicago The Art Institute of Chicago Retrieved 6 June 2020 Ernest Cole Retrieved 10 January 2018 Ernest Cole Display at Tate Modern Photographers in This Display Victoria amp Albert Museum Retrieved 1 May 2007 Exhibitions Apartheid Museum Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 1 May 2007 African Photography 1840 1998 The Castle Retrieved 1 May 2007 Colour this Whites Only Tate Britain Retrieved 1 May 2007 Dugger Celia W 17 November 2010 Ernest Cole Photographer The New York Times Retrieved 18 November 2010 Life through a lens Ernest Cole photographs shed light on apartheid The Guardian 25 November 2010 Retrieved 7 December 2022 Everything Was Moving Photography from the 60s and 70s The Barbican Centre Retrieved 4 November 2012 Cotter Holland 11 September 2014 Capturing Apartheid s Daily Indignity The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 7 December 2022 Ernest Cole Photographer Grey Art Gallery New York review FT com 11 November 2014 Archived from the original on 11 November 2014 Retrieved 7 December 2022 Kermeliotis Teo 12 September 2014 Ernest Cole Brave photographer who exposed horrors of apartheid from within CNN Retrieved 7 December 2022 Ernest Cole House of Bondage Foam all about photography www foam org Retrieved 27 March 2023 Further reading editDefiant Images Photography and Apartheid South Africa Darren Newbury Pretoria University of South Africa 2009 ISBN 978 1 86888 523 7 See Chapter 4 An unalterable blackness Ernest Cole s House of Bondage External links editHarmsen Monica Ernest Cole a presentation on the life of Ernest Cole at YouTube Apartheid Through the Eyes of One of South Africa s First Black Photojournalists The Leonard Lopate Show 30 September 2014 Ernest Cole s secret archive in pictures Photo story by The Guardian March 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ernest Cole photographer amp oldid 1213652696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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