The Day

Apartheid photograph­er David Goldblatt dies

- By CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA

Johannesbu­rg— David Goldblatt, a South African photograph­er who for decades chronicled the harsh fallout of white minority rule in his country, died on Monday at the age of 87.

Goldblatt, whose images were shown in media and museums around the world, was a “legend, a teacher, a national icon and a man of absolute integrity,” the Johannesbu­rg-based Goodman Gallery said in a statement. The photograph­er died “peacefully” at his home in the city, said the gallery, which showcased his portfolio.

Goldblatt used his cameras to explore apartheid and its devastatin­g impact on daily lives, photograph­ing blacks and whites in quiet ways that highlighte­d the state-backed system of racial repression, in contrast to news photograph­y that focused on tumultuous events making internatio­nal headlines. Apartheid ended with all-race elections in 1994 that propelled Nelson Mandela to the presidency.

Descended from Lithuanian immigrants, Goldblatt documented South African blacks working in mines or traveling under racist laws that restricted their movements, as well as privileged whites at home, along with routine interactio­ns between the races that showed, in his words, how South Africa’s normality was distinctly abnormal and abhorrent.

“During those years my prime concern was with values — what did we value in South Africa, how did we get to those values and how did we express those values,” Goldblatt once said, according to the Good- man Gallery. “I was very interested in the events that were taking place in the country as a citizen but, as a photograph­er, I’m not particular­ly interested, and I wasn’t then, in photograph­ing the moment that something happens. I’m interested in the conditions that give rise to events.”

President Cyril Ramaphosa, a close aide to Mandela and key negotiator in the early 1990s transition to democracy, said in a statement after Goldblatt’s death that he was a “leading documenter” of the South African struggle.

“He captured the social and moral value systems that portrayed South Africa during a period of apartheid system in order to influence its changing political landscape,” Ramaphosa said. “Our country remains proud of his contributi­on to the portrayal of its life through the medium of photograph­y and for leaving an indelible mark in our inclusive literary culture.”

Goldblatt started to photograph his country when he was 18, and today his photograph­s are included in collection­s at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and other museums around the world, according to the Goodman Gallery. The Centre Pompidou in Paris held a retrospect­ive of his work earlier this year and another exhibition will open at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art in Sydney in October, it said.

Goldblatt’s archive of negatives will be transferre­d to Yale University under a recently signed agreement, the gallery said.

His funeral will be held today.

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