HASSELBLAD
AWARD 2006
David Goldblatt
Hardbound,
12 " x 10 ¾", 84 pages
45 color illustrations
2007, Hatje Cantz
Introduction by Gunilla Knape
Text by Michael Godby
From the Publisher:
Publisher's Description When David Goldblatt
received the world-renowned Hasselblad Award in 2006, he had been
making photographs of the South African landscape and culture
for more than 50 years. Born in 1930 in a gold-mining town near
Johannesburg, his parents were Jewish refugees from Lithuania,
and they raised him with an emphasis on tolerance and antiracism.
In 1975, at the height of apartheid, Goldblatt explored white
nationalist culture in Some Afrikaners Photographed, and in the
80s he observed workers on the Kwandebele-Pretoria bus, many of
whom traveled eight hours every day to work and back. His late-90s
solo show at New York's Museum of Modern Art focused on architectural
work, and showed off Goldblatt's uncanny ability to discover a
society through its buildings and landscapes. His photographs
of architectural structures revealed the ways that ideology had
defined his home country's landscape.
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