Festival
Bamako 2011
David Goldblatt

Cosmo City, série Aerials views, 2009 ©David Goldblatt

Blitz Maaneveld at the Terrace, Woodstock, Cape Town, where he murdered a man with whom he had been gambling, Ex Offenders, 2008 ©David Goldblatt

Sammy Matsebula was a police officer when, in 1996, he joined in a cash heist here, in Lenasia South, Johannesburg, Ex Offenders, 2010 ©David Goldblatt

Fabian Hayes where he led an armed robbery, Blue Downs, Cape Town, Ex Offenders, 2010 ©David Goldblatt

Emmanuel Luthuli in his bedroom where he allegedly raped two girls, Sponjane, Eshowe, Ex Offenders, 2010 ©David Goldblatt

Kapou Maaneveld in Carnival costume on Darling Street, Cape Town, where in 1987 he robbed a man of his wallet, Ex Offenders, 2010 ©David Goldblatt

Benoni, where, in 2001, he hid after shooting a policeman, Ex Offenders, 2010 ©David Goldblatt

Mike MacKay at the crossing where he assaulted his wife’s lover, St James, Cape Town, Ex Offenders, 2010 ©David Goldblatt

Moeneeb Jacobs at the shop in Loop Street, Cape Town, where he shot and killed the owner, Ex Offenders, 2010 ©David Goldblatt

Pakkies strangled her son Abie on this bed in 2007. Lavender Hill, Cape Town, Ex Offenders, 2010 ©David Goldblatt

Hennie Gerber where he tortured and then murdered Samuel Kganakga, Heriotdale, Johannesburg, 14 April 2010 ©David Goldblatt
Very many of us in South Africa have been the victims of crime, often violent. With much stress and cost we try to protect our persons and property. Nevertheless we remain extremely vulnerable to attack by people who would seize our property and damage or end our lives. Having been a victim I asked myself who are the people who are doing this to us? Are they monsters? Ordinary people? Could they be my children? Are they you and me? I wanted to burrow under the statistics and meet some of these doers of crime as individuals, do portraits of them and learn about their lives. Who to photograph? I did not want to photograph prisoners in jail. I wanted to meet perpetrators as ‘ordinary’ people such as one might encounter in a street or supermarket. So I came to people who had done crime or been accused of it. If they had been in prison, they were now free or on parole. Where to do the photographs? I wanted to do them in situations that were somehow related to the crimes they had committed or of which they had been accused. It seemed to me that the scene of crime would likely be a place of special significance. Life-changing events would probably have been experienced there, both by victims and perpetrators. Hence these photographs and the accounts of the people within them. Most were trying, often in desperately difficult circumstances, to go straight. Consequently I call them not criminals, not offenders, but ex-offenders.
I have paid each of these subjects R800 (about 80 Euros) and each has signed a release giving me permission to publish and exhibit the photographs and their life stories.
I warn each of my subjects that publication and exhibition might, at some later stage in life, damage them, and I proceed only if they fully understand what they are doing and agree to doing it. I undertake to make no money out of this work. Any proceeds above gallery commission will be given to an organisation dealing with the education and rehabilitation of prisoners.
David Goldblatt (South Africa)
Ex-Offenders
Curators: David Goldblatt and Michket Krifa
Links
http://www.rencontres-bamako.com/spip.php?rubrique1&lang=fr
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