I have always admired Guy Tillim's work and found a nice interview with him over on Lens Culture which I have copied and pasted on here.
South African photographer Guy Tillim creates lush, complex,
interweaving photo essays that seem more like nonfiction novels than
photojournalism. Indeed, to my mind, his photographs and stories are
best encountered in the several excellent books he has authored.
He began taking pictures as a member of the photocollective
Afropix, in the mid 1980s during the last days of apartheid. Tillim has
worked as a freelance photographer in South Africa for the local and
foreign media, including positions with Reuters between 1986 and 1988,
and with Agence France Presse in 1993 and 1994.
While continuing to focus on the social and natural challenges
on the African continent, his working style has evolved into a much more
subtle, quiet, and enigmatic approach. He has photographed child
soldiers in Congo, refugees in Angola, people who live in the high rises
of Johannesburg, and the surrealistic decay of post-colonial modern
architecture in many parts of Africa.
As one critic noted, “Tillim’s work counters First-World
expectations of these places — in between his portraits of those caught
in the aftermath of war or displacement, he is apt to capture the
stillness of these spaces as well. During an election rally, he might
shoot toward the sky, capturing the tops of raised arms beneath a tree
that fills most of the frame; or turn away from the action to shoot the
rapids of the Congo River, or an empty bed under mosquito netting. In
famine-stricken Malawi, Tillim chose to take classically-lit,
Caravaggio-like portraits of its residents. That these moments of repose
dominate a body of work shot in some of the world’s most war-torn
places is a testament to the quietude of Tillim’s vision. His
photographs have a hush and luminosity that runs counter to traditional
ideas of photojournalism.”
Tillim has received many awards for his work including the Prix SCAM (Société Civile des Auteurs Multimedia)
Roger Pic in 2002, the Higashikawa Overseas Photographer Award (Japan)
in 2003, and the 2004 DaimlerChrysler Award for South African
photography. In 2005 he won the Leica Oskar Barnack Award for his
Jo'burg series.
In an interview for Lens Culture, Tillim said, “Photojournalism
tends to try and create drama. Tries to look for a false drama, tries to
use, you know, photojournalistic iconography to create a sense of
moment. I think that there is a movement away from that in
photojournalism. . . . because what you used to have were these quite
inarticulate images that were seen to be so full of drama.”
17.10.13
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