Saturday Star

The SA heaven is seeing

Drone’s pictures show harsh facts overlooked on ground

- STAFF REPORTER

CAPE TOWN photograph­er Johnny Miller used a drone to capture the Cape township of Masiphumel­ele from above. Separated by a stretch of wetlands and an electric fence from the scenic neighbouri­ng suburb of Lake Michelle, Masiphumul­ele is densely populated and worlds removed from the lifestyle of its nearest neighbours.

When the post was shared more than 1 000 times, although Miller had only 1 200 followers, he knew he was on to something. In the months since, he has travelled South Africa with his Inspire 1 drone and captured images that tell a story of inequality that remains entrenched 22 years after the end of apartheid.

The project has garnered interest globally from influentia­l media outlets, from India to Poland and China, from the BBC and CNN to Huffington Post and The Guardian.

Now Miller’s digital art project, Unequal Scenes, targeting a social issue, has taken the world by storm, also attracting interest from the government and business.

The series of photograph­s, which is being exhibited at Gordon Institute of Business Science in Joburg, shows the harsh difference between the living conditions of rich and poor in an objective and unambiguou­s way.

The Deputy Minister of Corporate Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs, Andries Nel, who attended the opening this week, said the images provided an alter native tool to work towards the spatial transforma­tion needed to heal the fragmentat­ion left by apartheid.

The Saturday Star spoke to Miller, a photograph­er and videograph­er focusing on issues of urbanisati­on, social justice, dignity, and spatial planning. Originally from Seattle, US, he is living in Cape Town.

What brought you to South Africa originally and what made you stay for so long?

I won a Rotary Ambassador­ial Scholarshi­p in 2011, when I was just starting out in photograph­y in Seattle. This allowed me to study anywhere in the world for one year at a Master’s degree level, provided I spoke at Rotary clubs in the host country. It was a great opportunit­y and I’m forever grateful for it. I chose the University of Cape Town and studied anthropolo­gy.

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How did you come to start taking drone photos?

During my course work at UCT we covered a lot of topics and some of the most interestin­g to me were spatial planning and the architectu­re of the city, specifical­ly the particular way it was done under apartheid. For example, there are huge buffer zones that were created to keep race groups separate. I just thought that was fascinatin­g.

When I got the drone, I had a spark of inspiratio­n that perhaps I could capture those separation­s from a new perspectiv­e.

What were you hoping to get back then?

Drone photograph­y is interestin­g because it gives us a new perspectiv­e on places we “thought” we knew. We have

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this amazing ability to “think” we know a situation, having seen it so many times from the same perspectiv­e.

It becomes routine, but when you fly, you totally change that. Buildings, mountains, forests – they all look totally different.

And you know, there have been tons of aerial photog raphs of beautiful Cape Town landscapes, but I hadn’t seen any on “social issues”.

I took the drone to one of the most dramatic examples of informal settlement­s, which is the boundary between Masi- phumelele and Lake Michelle, Noordhoek. I wanted people to see that divide from a new perspectiv­e. I wanted to disrupt that sense of complacenc­y that I felt and that I knew a lot of privileged people in Cape Town feel. And that’s pretty much how it all started.

How did you pick the locations you photograph?

These photograph­s were taken in South Africa’s largest metropolit­an areas: Joburg, Cape Town, and Durban. All the locations were researched using census data and mapping software to find highly unequal locations,

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which were then photograph­ed and recorded using a DJI Inspire drone. The final images were not photoshopp­ed or modified in any way, except for basic cropping, exposure, and colour correction­s.

Why tur n a digital project into an exhibition of prints?

I had two reasons to work with the Gordon Institute of Business Science and create this exhibition.

First, seeing these images printed in a large format, in a tangible form, adds poignancy and gravitas that you just can’t get through your screen or cellphone.

I felt it myself, looking at the images, even though I’d seen them hundreds of times on my computer. There is an ability to linger, to notice details, and to

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change your perspectiv­e that is just not possible any other way.

Second, my intention was to provoke conversati­ons about inequality.

I think printing them and hosting them in a safe, conformabl­e space, like the institute, provides that atmosphere.

I’ve witnessed how the images draw people in and almost force them to engage with what they’re being confronted with. I think this public space, the open-plan foyer and cafeteria, lends itself beautifull­y to what I was trying to achieve.

The Unequal Scenes exhibition is open to the public daily from 8am to 8pm until September 10 at the Gordon Institute of Business Science, 26 Melville Road, Illovo. For more info, check the GIBS Art on Campus Facebook page.

 ??  ?? Photograph­er Johnny Miller’s drone pictures have been able to capture the stark divide between rich and poor – as in Westridge, Durban (above) and Pietermari­tzburg (below, left) – that are a legacy of apartheid.
Photograph­er Johnny Miller’s drone pictures have been able to capture the stark divide between rich and poor – as in Westridge, Durban (above) and Pietermari­tzburg (below, left) – that are a legacy of apartheid.
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