Photographer David Goldblatt dies at 87
DAVID Goldblatt, South Africa’s best known photographer, died yesterday.
The Goodman Gallery confirmed the death of the artist.
“It is with great sorrow that we announce that David Goldblatt has died, aged 87. He passed away peacefully in the early hours of this morning at his home in Johannesburg,” the gallery said.
Goldblatt was internationally acclaimed for his black and white works that chronicled everyday life under white minority rule in South Africa.
President Cyril Ramaphosa said Goldblatt used “the camera to capture the struggles of our people” and to portray the social and moral order that defined apartheid.
He will be buried in the Jewish section of the Westpark Cemetery in Johannesburg today.
In 1998, Goldblatt became the first South African to have a solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and in 2009 he won the Henri Cartier-Bresson Award.
He was awarded the Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres order by the French ministry of culture in 2016 and in February this year a retrospective of his work, including some 200 photographs, opened at the Pompidou Centre in Paris.
Many South Africans paid tribute to Goldblatt on social media.
Former newspaper editor Nic Dawes recalled that in his 80s Goldblatt continued to produce fine work and campaign for freedom of expression, notably protesting against the controversial Protection of State Information Bill.
Goldblatt began photographing in the early 1960s and described his decision to work mainly in black and white by saying colour seemed too “sweet” a medium for the bitterness and disgust that apartheid inspired.
His later work often focused on landscapes and architecture as a reflection of social values.