Jürgen Schadeberg

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German, English, French 2008, 288 Pages, 285 Ills. Hardcover 325mm x 325mm
ISBN: 978-6-70572150-1
Texts by: Robert von Lucius German, English, French 2008, 288 Pages, 285 Ills. Hardcover 326mm x 325mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-2150-9

Quite a few impressive images by Jürgen Schadeberg (*1931 in Berlin) have gone down in history. The young photographer went to South Africa in 1950 to work for Drum, the first magazine for black readers; later, he worked for Life and Stern magazines. In tJürgen Schadeberg (*1931 inBerlin) lives and works near Paris.After completing an apprenticeship as a photographer with the Deutsche Presse Agentur in Hamburg, Schadeberg immigrated to South Africa in 1950, where he became a photographer and art director for Drum magazine. He photographed many important events and figures of the anti-apartheid movement. In 1964 he was forced to leave South Africa, so he worked as a photojournalist in Europe and the United States during the nineteen-sixties and seventies. He has taught photography at various art schools and curated influential photography exhibitions. In 1985 he returned to South Africa for a number of years.Numerous exhibitions in important photography galleries around the world, including large retrospectives at the South African National Gallery in Cape Town in 1996 and at the Gallery of Photography in Dublin in 1999. Solo shows at the Maison européenne de la Photographie in Paris in 2002, the Kunstmuseum Bochum in 2005, the Belgravia Gallery in London, 2007, and an exhibition of new works, Voices from the Land, traveling since 2006.Jürgen Schadeberg (*1931 inBerlin) lives and works near Paris.After completing an apprenticeship as a photographer with the Deutsche Presse Agentur in Hamburg, Schadeberg immigrated to South Africa in 1950, where he became a photographer and art director for Drum magazine. He photographed many important events and figures of the anti-apartheid movement. In 1964 he was forced to leave South Africa, so he worked as a photojournalist in Europe and the United States during the nineteen-sixties and seventies. He has taught photography at various art schools and curated influential photography exhibitions. In 1985 he returned to South Africa for a number of years.Numerous exhibitions in important photography galleries around the world, including large retrospectives at the South African National Gallery in Cape Town in 1996 and at the Gallery of Photography in Dublin in 1999. Solo shows at the Maison européenne de la Photographie in Paris in 2002, the Kunstmuseum Bochum in 2005, the Belgravia Gallery in London, 2007, and an exhibition of new works, Voices from the Land, traveling since 2006.

Quite a few impressive images by Jürgen Schadeberg (*1931 in Berlin) have gone down in history. The young photographer went to South Africa in 1950 to work for Drum, the first magazine for black readers; later, he worked for Life and Stern magazines. In tJürgen Schadeberg (*1931 inBerlin) lives and works near Paris.After completing an apprenticeship as a photographer with the Deutsche Presse Agentur in Hamburg, Schadeberg immigrated to South Africa in 1950, where he became a photographer and art director for Drum magazine. He photographed many important events and figures of the anti-apartheid movement. In 1964 he was forced to leave South Africa, so he worked as a photojournalist in Europe and the United States during the nineteen-sixties and seventies. He has taught photography at various art schools and curated influential photography exhibitions. In 1985 he returned to South Africa for a number of years.Numerous exhibitions in important photography galleries around the world, including large retrospectives at the South African National Gallery in Cape Town in 1996 and at the Gallery of Photography in Dublin in 1999. Solo shows at the Maison européenne de la Photographie in Paris in 2002, the Kunstmuseum Bochum in 2005, the Belgravia Gallery in London, 2007, and an exhibition of new works, Voices from the Land, traveling since 2006.Jürgen Schadeberg (*1931 inBerlin) lives and works near Paris.After completing an apprenticeship as a photographer with the Deutsche Presse Agentur in Hamburg, Schadeberg immigrated to South Africa in 1950, where he became a photographer and art director for Drum magazine. He photographed many important events and figures of the anti-apartheid movement. In 1964 he was forced to leave South Africa, so he worked as a photojournalist in Europe and the United States during the nineteen-sixties and seventies. He has taught photography at various art schools and curated influential photography exhibitions. In 1985 he returned to South Africa for a number of years.Numerous exhibitions in important photography galleries around the world, including large retrospectives at the South African National Gallery in Cape Town in 1996 and at the Gallery of Photography in Dublin in 1999. Solo shows at the Maison européenne de la Photographie in Paris in 2002, the Kunstmuseum Bochum in 2005, the Belgravia Gallery in London, 2007, and an exhibition of new works, Voices from the Land, traveling since 2006.