Alf Kumalo

Alfred Kumalo[1] (5 September 1930  21 October 2012),[2] better known as Alf Kumalo, and with the surname sometimes spelled Khumalo, was a South African documentary photographer and photojournalist.[2][3]

Overview

Alf Kumalo was born in Utrecht near Newcastle in the province of KwaZulu Natal.[4] He first worked in a garage doing various jobs and then started freelancing for various publications, selling his photographs where he could. He did a lot of work for the Bantu World.

In 1956, he found a permanent position at the Golden City Post and later received assignments from The Star, a South African daily, Drum magazine, and international publications like The New York Times. He was among the photographers who captured the Sharpeville massacre on 21 March 1960.[2]

In 1963, while working for Drum, he was selected together with Harry Mashabela to go and shoot a story about African students in the Iron Curtain countries. The two made the front cover of the next edition of the magazine, "Drum men go to Europe".

While in London, he interviewed Cassius Clay and then found out that he had won first place in a photographic competition. The prize was an Austin Cambridge motor car.[5] Kumalo had been encouraged to enter by David Hazelhurst, the editor of Drum.

Kumalo had used his African names Mangaliso Dukuza because he wanted the judging to be impartial and not influenced by his reputation. A picture of him and his award was published by the Star on its front page. "A lot of black people talked about it for days afterwards, because in those days they would only get on to the front pages of white newspapers if they were thieves."[5]

Despite the prospect of being arrested and assaulted, Kumalo kept on taking pictures, sometimes at personal cost. David Hazelhurst recalled:

One day in 1963, when I was editor of Drum magazine, Alf Khumalo walked into my office carrying a picture. It showed a burly policeman delivering a vicious kick between the legs of reporter Harry Mashabela from behind. Such was the power of the kick you could see the shape of his boot exploding through the front of Mashabela' trousers.

It was the year of the jackboot of John Vorster, habeas corpus had disappeared, the 90-day-detention without trial Act had given policemen a license to kill and assault behind closed doors with impunity.

The police hated journalists – and photographers in particular, for their pictures portrayed the truth about an evil system, and Kumalo, despite warnings, risked a severe beating to take the Mashabela picture. He had tried to sell it to several papers with no success.[6]

Hazelhurst splashed the picture across two pages of Drum.

Over the years Kumalo photographed and documented many of the historic moments in recent South African history. These include the Treason Trial, the Rivonia Trial, the emergence of Black Consciousness, the Student Uprising of 1976 and the Codesa talks. This was despite numerous periods of detention, arrests and official harassment.

His work has appeared in international newspapers like The Observer, The New York Times, New York Post, and the Sunday Independent. Locally, he also worked for Drum magazine and the long-defunct Rand Daily Mail.[7]

To assist the upcoming generation of South African photographers, Kumalo opened a photographic school in Diepkloof Soweto in 2002.[2] The school offers nine-month courses designed to train photographers from disadvantaged backgrounds.[8]

He died on 21 October 2012.[9]

Books

Film and video

Alf Kumalo played himself in the movie The Bang Bang Club (2010), which starred Ryan Phillippe as Greg Marinovich, Taylor Kitsch as Kevin Carter, Frank Rautenbach as Ken Oosterbroek and Neels Van Jaarsveld as João Silva.

Solo exhibitions

Selected group exhibitions

Awards

References

  1. Alf, Kumalo. "Alf Kumalo book". Alf Kumalo. Retrieved 27 July 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Weber, Bruce (14 November 2012). "Alf Kumalo, Whose Photography Indicted Apartheid, Dies at 82". The New York Times. Retrieved 15 November 2012.
  3. "SA mourns death of Alf Khumalo". sabc.co.za. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  4. http://www.sahistory.org.za/people/alfred-khumalo
  5. 1 2 "Alf Kumalo celebrates 50 years in journalism". mediaweb. mediaweb. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 21 May 2007.
  6. 1 2 "Veteran photographer Alf Kumalo wins the 2005 Nat Nakasa Award". SA National Editors Forum. Retrieved 17 May 2007.
  7. Majavu, Mandisi (5 November 2004). "Alf Khumalo: 5 decades in photos". SA Information. Retrieved 16 May 2007.
  8. 1 2 Mynhardt, Izane. "Interview: Alfred Khumalo". New Visions Africa. Retrieved 16 May 2007.
  9. http://www.iol.com
  10. "Alfred Khumalo". S A Government. 10 November 2004. Retrieved 16 May 2007.
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