UNFORGETTABLE MEMORIES CAPTURED IN PHOTOGRAPHS
Christine by Sonke C. WeissBy
Margaretta wa Gacheru
German photographer,
writer, journalist, and filmmaker Sonke C. Weiss has spent the past 25 years
traveling and working in Africa. In all that time, his camera has been close at
hand to capture memorable moments. Many of those images have earned him
international awards.
But they
also reflect what the photographer calls “unforgettable memories”, a few of
which he’s currently exhibiting at Red Hill Gallery in a show he entitled “All
that I can’t leave behind.”
His
exhibition opened last Sunday, November 14th and runs until January
9th next year. Its title suggests he has a deep attachment to the
places, people, and memories each image represents. It also implies that for
all the decades he has been in Africa, working everywhere from Uganda, Ethiopia,
Tanzania, South Africa, and Kenya, he is still something of a stranger in the
region however rich his experience has been here.
The exhibition itself is honed down from his huge collection of photos taken since the 1990s when he first came to Africa for an “adventure” and for “kicks’.
“I’d yearned since childhood for the kind of adventure I’d found in my Tintin comic books,” he wrote in his artist’s statement. “I wanted to see the world. I wanted [especially] to see Africa.”
Getting a job as a communications officer with the humanitarian aid NGO, World Vision, enabled him to work in several trouble-spots in the region, including northern Uganda.
“We had a
rehabilitation centre in Gulu for child soldiers who’d been rescued from the
Lord’s Resistance Army,” he recalls. One of those child soldiers named
Christine is in the exhibition. Hers is one of the three collage portraits that
Weiss created to compliment the 30 photos in the show.
“I also wrote a book on child soldiers, focused in Christine’s life story,” he says. “She was able to accompany me on a book tour in Germany which was quite successful,” he adds.
What he calls his favorite photo in the exhibition was also shot in Gulu. It’s of a woman street-food vender at the end of her working day. She’s packing up her cooking pots and tea kettles. But Weiss says what appeals to him about the shot is the way her pose looks as graceful as that of a ballerina.There are
other elements of the image that are striking: the texture and weather-worn
color of the tall wall in the photograph; the balance of simple elements
hanging from the wall; and the way the photograph itself looks almost like a hyper-realist
painting.
The one
other photo from Uganda that grabs one’s attention is another portrait, only
this one is of a business woman surrounded by huge gunia (hessian) sacks filled
with charcoal. Having a personal concern for trees and the acute problem of
deforestation, I find the image painful in its implications. But it is eloquent
in its ability to visually narrate a complicated story about trees and Ugandans’
need for energy irrespective of the long-term implications of destroying Africa’s
rainforests.
All of the
images in Weiss’s exhibition have that narrative quality. He has two
photographs taken in Tanzania during the pandemic and hung almost as if they
were a diptych. In one, the young woman wears a mask; in the other the young mask-less
man looks embarrassed with his hand over his mouth.
“You remember
how the former leader of Tanzania opposed masks, but things changed with the
change of leadership,” Weiss says.
But it’s on
the gallery wall where Weiss, with the Gallery’s owner-curator Hellmuth Rossler-Musch,
hung over 20 of the photographer’s smaller images that one will see how
intimately he got to know the non-touristic life of African peoples. For one
thing, there isn’t one zebra, elephant, or lion in the whole show. Only African
people living in families, often in informal settlements, and reflecting less
on the poverty of the people and more on the aesthetic elements of what he
sees.
Critics of
Weiss’s exhibition might see it as a white voyeur’s perspective on poverty in
the Africa. And yet, the photographer has initially gone to all those countries
on a mission to assist. In the process, he has witnessed people’s everyday
lives, like the lady street vender and the former child soldier.
Some of Weiss’s photos that couldn’t find room in this show were shot in Kibera where he was covering a COVID-awareness campaign designed by artists from the Maasai Mbili collective.
“They
painted walls that said, BEWARE COVID, and the community took note,” he says,
clearly impressed with the M2 initiative.
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