Friday, 18 April 2014

Pieter Hugo

Pieter Hugo was born in Johannesburg, South Africa in 1976. He now lives in Cape Town with his wife and kids and works as a self-taught documentary photographer.  He feels photography is democratic. A lot of his work reflects his upbringing during South Africa’s apartheid policy and he himself has in the past stated how he feels African but many other people in South African would disagree with him. He seems to still struggle with his identity in such a fractured and problematic country and believes the legacy of apartheid still casts a long shadow over the country. This has led to him questioning how to properly portray the country’s issues through his photography. Hugo has in the past mentioned how his views have changed since he has married and had children and is now more troubled by the issues in society.  His feeling of not being fully accepted as an African person has fuelled his desire to become a photographer. This has also led to the type of people he photographs and he likes to hold a personal interaction and connection with his subjects. He primarily focuses on the lower classes and people throughout Africa who have been marginalized in some way. His subjects tend to be victims of poverty, genocide, AIDS or environmental disasters and films most of them going about their day to day lives. His work can also be very varied with him snapping landscapes, portraiture, still life and documentary style.

Despite Hugo being a relatively young photographer he has received his fair share of criticism. The main criticism has been of the nature of his subject, with it being described as sensational and exploitative of the “exotic other”. He responded to the criticism by saying; “My intentions are in no way malignant, yet somehow people pick it up in that way. I've travelled through Africa, I know it, but at the same time I’m not really part of it. I can’t claim to have an authentic voice, but I can claim to have an honest one.”

While he has received criticism, he has also been praised as an award winning photographer. In 2005 his portrait of a man with a hyena won first prize in the Portraits section of the World Press Photo. He then received the Standard Bank Young Artist Award in 2007. His photography has given him great recognition and led to him working with music artists to direct their videos. He also photographed models for Italian luxury label Bottega Veneta’s spring/summer campaign 2014. Famous musicians have also referenced Hugo’s work with BeyoncĂ© Knowles using it for her “Run the World (Girls)” and Nick Cave’s video featuring the hyena handlers.

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Hugo became the beneficiary of a changed political attitude toward South Africa. He has gained the trust of some of the world’s most disadvantaged people. He shows respect to his subjects by photographing them at eye level and portrays them as he would portray people he already knew.

 

His Works


Pieter Hugo has had his work exhibited in some of the biggest galleries throughout the world such as ‘Kin’ at the Yossi Milo Gallery in New York and ‘Apartheid & After’ at the Huis Marseille in Amsterdam. 


He is best known for ‘The Hyena & Other Men’. It contains photographs of hyena handlers, known as Gadawan Kura, from Lagos in Nigeria. Pieter’s interest was piqued when he received an image of some of the Gadawan Kura taken on a mobile phone. The men were starting to become known throughout Africa as drug dealers, debt collectors and thieves who used the hyenas as muscle in support of their criminal activities. Hugo investigated the men and found them in a shantytown outside Abuja. Hugo described the men as “itinerant minstrels…a group of men, a little girl, three hyenas, four monkeys and a few rock pythons.” (Pieter Hugo). Hugo spent a lot of time with the group over the course of two years. He discovered that them being debt collectors was a myth and in fact they were street performers. He travelled with them as they staged performances and took portraits of them posing with the animals. While taking the photographs Hugo considered the animals to be just as much the subject as the Gadawan Kura were. He showed this by including both the men and the animals’ names in the titles of the photographs. Hyenas weren’t the only wild animals the men kept with some photographs showing baboons dressed in human clothes and children holding snakes. The choice of hyenas is an unusual one considering they have seldom been domesticated. Some of the men are seen holding clubs and most of the hyenas are muzzled to suggest they are not completely domesticated.


Another notorious piece of work from Hugo is that of ‘Nollywood’. Nollywood is the world’s third biggest film production centre, only behind Hollywood and Bollywood. The industry produces around 2,000 movies a year and tells stories that appeal to and reflect the lives of its audience. The film production centres in the southern Nigerian cities of Enugo and Asaba, where Hugo shot the portraits in his series. The actors tend to be local people and the plots confront the audience with familiar situations of romance, comedy, witchcraft, bribery and prostitution. The films are usually criticised for being over-dramatic with tragic endings. A lot of the films tend to be horror as they can be made low-budget and tend to appeal more to the makers of the film and the audience. They also contain a lot of black magic, zombies and occults.    

My Thoughts


“I am of a generation that approaches photography with a keen awareness of the problems inherent in pointing a camera at anything.” (Pieter Hugo)

I found Pieter Hugo to be a very interesting character and photographer. I like how although he grew up in a middle to upper-class house, he was still aware that the society he was growing up in needed to change. His work is very much related to his experiences in South Africa with a government holding an apartheid policy. It’s impressive that he hasn’t allowed academics to influence his work by dictating to him that he should be politically correct. He gets accused of being racist, when in fact his work reflects the complete opposite.  
My favourite piece of work by him is ‘Hyena & Other Men’. I like how the photographs are shot and although the images are fearsome, I still found myself gaining warmth for the people in them. I find myself conflicted in that the animals are chained up and seem to be quite suppressed, yet the men clearly hold great love for their animals. The fact Hugo photographed the hyenas could have something to do with them being marginalised by the world, much like his other subjects. They tend to scavenge the leftovers of prey other animals have killed and are portrayed as cowardly. I think the photographs ask the viewer a question on morality. As an animal lover I feel sad for them as these images evoke not only the power of these creatures, but also the desperation of their owners who depend on them to earn the money they need to survive.
I also really enjoyed ‘Nollywood’. The piece of work is one of Hugo’s more controversial works but I think he is trying to portray something that a lot of people don’t understand. He has been accused of sensationalism and spreading racial stereotypes but I believe his intention is to speak to people and shock them as much as the Nollywood films do. He pays homage to the Nollywood film industry by photographing people made up as zombies and poses racial questions by snapping black children covered in white paint.


My homeland is Africa, but I’m white. I feel African, whatever that means, but if you ask anyone in South Africa if I’m African, they will almost certainly say no. I don’t fit into the social topography of my country and that certainly fuelled why I became a photographer. I am of a generation that approaches photography with a keen awareness of the problems inherent in pointing a camera at anything.” (Pieter Hugo) I think this quote really sums up the type of person Hugo is, the beliefs he holds and why he chooses the subjects that he does. I didn’t have much of an interest in photography before I started this course but that has changed since. I am also glad I chose to study Pieter Hugo and I follow his future work with a keen interest.



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