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David Goldblatt in "Johannesburg" - Season 9 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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    DAVID GOLDBLATT: The camera is a very strange instrument.
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    It demands first of all, that you see coherently,
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    it makes it possible for you to enter into
    worlds, and places, and associations,
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    that would otherwise be very difficult to do.
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    Being a photographer is a wonderful thing, really.
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    I'm not tied to any place.
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    I can go and come as I like.
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    It's wonderful.
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    My childhood years in Johannesburg were very
    happy.
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    We enjoyed an enormous amount of freedom.
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    We would ride our bicycles all over the Randfontein Estates, which was the goldmine around the town,
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    and we could explore the mines to a
    great degree.
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    It's a brutal landscape, it's very bare, bleak,
    we don't have a sea, we don’t have a big river.
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    We just had these rather dull and uninteresting spaces.
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    I think there was a kind of osmosis taking
    place in me,
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    I became organically related to the place.
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    On the one hand, I want to photograph the land.
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    Land, in a very broad sense.
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    On the other hand, I'm fascinated by our structures
    as declarations of value.
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    I'm too late for this photograph, the trees
    are already in leaf.
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    I’m going to try.
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    Let's have a look.
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    It seems to me that the style of architecture
    that is emerging to the north of Johannesburg,
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    is a kind of an aggressive materialism.
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    In this country, because of the nakedness,
    almost, of the struggles that took place between
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    black and white,
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    the structures that emerged were amazingly
    clear demonstrations of value systems.
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    White Afrikaner Protestant churches are those
    that I think of particularly.
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    Their churches had these huge windows and
    this mega phonic structure,
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    come the 1970s the forces of liberation are
    coming down to South Africa,
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    increasingly impinging on Afrikaners.
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    So, their new churches become defensive.
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    There are very few of them built with piercings
    in the outer walls.
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    Public structures become clear manifestations
    to self-image.
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    Look at this, look at this, huge building,
    but at least this has got a certain amount
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    of movement.
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    That’s a Hasselblad.
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    Famous, very expensive, beautifully built box.
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    My brother Dan would come back from somewhere
    in the world and bring little miniature cameras.
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    He brought back from one of his voyages a
    Contax camera.
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    The Contax was the Zeiss equivalent of the
    Leica.
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    It was a great camera, but this particular
    one had been severely damaged.
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    I don't know what its history was during the
    war, but when it eventually reached Randfontein,
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    it was a very sick camera, but I tried to
    do some photography with it.
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    When I matriculated in '48, I certainly had
    a strong wish to become a magazine photographer.
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    “Life” and “Look from America,” “Picture
    Post” from England were the
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    window on the world for millions.
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    In 1952, I think it was, the apartheid government
    had begun to put its ideology in place and
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    one of the first steps was to separate the
    races in public amenities.
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    I did a short strip of film of a black man
    going up and then being turned back by a black policeman.
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    He had been accustomed to taking that route
    into the Johannesburg railway station and
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    suddenly he was not allowed to.
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    So I sent a strip of those photographs to
    “Picture Post” to the editor.
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    I was politely rejected.
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    I tried to do a magazine story about the men
    who worked on top of the mine dumps around
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    our town.
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    These men worked right through the year, every
    day and night,
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    no matter what the conditions, dealing with
    the waste of the milling operation.
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    We were subjecting these men to a terrible
    existence.
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    It is freezing cold on the top of those dumps
    in winter.
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    Here's an old dump.
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    It's been covered in grass to keep down the dust.
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    Black miners could not rise beyond the level
    of what were known as boss boys or team leaders.
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    Of course, they were not boys, they were men.
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    In order to rise above that level, you had
    to have a blasting certificate,
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    and this was a method that was used by the
    white trade unions to ensure that
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    only whites could go into the upper echelons
    of the mining hierarchy.
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    If one wanted to look at this society,
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    you had to grasp the nature of white Afrikaner
    life and ideology.
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    The Afrikaners were descended from the Dutch
    and French Huguenot, and German, Scotch, early,
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    early settlers in this country.
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    Small as that group was, they determined a
    great deal of what happened here.
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    For them, their conquest of the tribes that
    they encountered were guided by God, the ineffable.
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    This became something that I had to deal with
    as I saw it in a way that hadn't been done before.
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    During the 1930s, the right wing of Afrikaner
    movement known as the Ossewabrandwag was anti-Jewish.
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    Like many of my fellow Jewish friends,
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    I had a fear of Afrikaners from my childhood
    and yet felt the need to explore this.
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    These people really absorbed me.
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    They frightened me in their depths of the
    fear of black people,
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    and yet at the same time their ease with them.
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    I would be photographing an elderly couple
    on one of these plots
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    and a little black girl would walk into the
    parlor, sucking her thumb
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    and just stand there watching me work and
    they would not say a word to her.
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    They didn't object and tell her to get out.
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    It was just accepted that she would come in
    and do that.
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    A common response from potential publishers
    was “where's the apartheid?”
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    To me, it was embedded deep, deep, deep in
    the grain of those photographs.
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    People overseas simply didn't grasp these
    extraordinary contradictions in our life.
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    I was not interested in trying to explain
    things to them.
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    We're heading into the center of Boksburg.
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    I photographed here in the winter of ‘79
    and again in ‘80.
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    Instead of traveling the country and photographing
    whites generally,
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    I wanted to concentrate on this one community
    and regard it as a microcosm of
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    white middle class life in South Africa
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    and that's what I did.
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    This entire town was reserved for whites.
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    Black people came here only if they had the
    right paper, a pass.
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    I began to look at these crowds waiting at
    traffic lights to cross the road and found
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    them remarkably exposing of us.
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    Corner of Commissioner and Eloff.
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    Oh, we must go up one block.
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    This picture here was taken from where I'm
    standing now, of that shop there,
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    and I was probably standing here when I took
    this picture.
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    I was excited by this winter light that we
    have, it’s very sharp and low angled.
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    These low buildings were to me, the quintessence
    of the world that I knew and grew up in.
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    There's nothing distinctive about them.
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    I don't think there is a single picture in
    that whole collection in which the subject
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    is looking at the camera or me.
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    I wanted to disappear from the equation.
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    In Soweto and Hillbrow, the photographs were
    encounters between myself and the subject.
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    Instead of trying to photograph life as an
    ongoing process.
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    I elected to photograph people as they were
    in a formal way.
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    I was always insistent that the subject would
    look at me, not at the camera.
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    In doing those portraits.,
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    I became aware of people's bodies in a very
    emphatic way.
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    Arms, and limbs, breasts, hips, necks, particulars.
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    Here is a whole drawer of four by fives.
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    On my death, my negatives, my contact prints,
    and my working prints, would have gone to
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    the University of Cape Town
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    where they had established an archival facility
    for this purpose.
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    But after the burning of paintings and the
    burning of some photographs by the students
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    in the university art collection,
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    the university appointed a committee of academics
    and students to examine every piece of art
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    with a view to deciding
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    whether to pulling out or covering up any
    artwork that they regarded as potentially
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    offensive to black students.
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    Well, I can't accept that kind of valuation
    and interference in the freedom of expression.
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    If there are pieces of work in the art collection
    that perhaps make other people uncomfortable,
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    then let’s exhibit them, hold debates.
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    I regard my work as one thing that I will
    not allow to be compromised,
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    and I compromise every day,
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    just by drawing breath in this country.
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    But today under a democracy, I refuse to be
    complicit.
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    I canceled my contract.
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    And my stuff won't go to the University of
    Cape Town.
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    I don't think I've ever been bored with photography.
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    I have sometimes become extremely frustrated
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    Ahh [bleeped].
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    Disgusted.
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    Look at this.
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    Look at this.
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    but it's a life absorbing process.
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    It absorbs me fully.
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    I've changed my mind about photographs 25,
    30 years after I've taken them.
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    My problem is that I don't have 25 or 30 years
    to make up my mind now.
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    I've got to make up my mind much sooner.
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    I was doing photographs of the goldmines,
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    and I saw a reflection of myself,
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    so I just snapped it.
Title:
David Goldblatt in "Johannesburg" - Season 9 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Art in the Twenty-First Century" broadcast series
Duration:
15:00

English subtitles

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