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A love supreme: A requiem for Koyo Kouoh

A love supreme: A requiem for Koyo Kouoh

Mail & Guardian16-05-2025

Wave goodbye: Cameroonian-Swiss curator Koyo Kouoh, who died of cancer on 10 May, was executive director and chief curator of the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa in Cape Town.
This is strange. It's one of those indescribable feelings. Let me take a few steps black to the future.
No, I'm not referring to the fact that the curator and arts administrator Koyo Kouoh transitioned from this heretofore world hardly a harmattan season whipped astir on the hot fumes of Valentine Yves Mudimbe's chariot of fire's zooshing out of planet earth.
It's not that. It is not that — what is strange is this 'thing' of happenstance, if it ever really exists. I'm thinking of Koyo Kouoh, subconsciously reframing her into a past, but when I think deeper, I have the feeling that there was always a 'pastness', not ancient, not post-anything, or pre-that about her.
She vibed off energies of beautiful nostalgia, sometimes melancholia, too, even when photographed decked out in loud psychedelic frocks. And this is the 'strangeness', strange not because she was weird, but because we are usually inadequate to language, a phenomenon of a person whose spirit is logged in the past, yet beams with the outlook and vision ferried by radical futurity. A futurity that can be best described by a tomorrow born of today's challenges and less of the unexcisable hunchback of history.
Within this Hegellian metaphysical connections, a spirituality of time and place, of things as they are, unencumbered by humanity's inadequacies to transcend its bodies, its weighty, fleshy needs, its ideologies and rules of living, as opposed to the spectral rot of existence, or the joy of possibility, thinking of Kouoh, is to feel, to love, and to respect Kouoh.
What imbued Kouoh with so much strength and power?
The feeling of thinking about losing Kouoh, and before her Okwui Enwezor and Bibi Silva, renders words inadequate. Mostly because multiple libraries, connections and continuity (one hopes not) are deeply fractured, and threatened by discontinuities, occasioned by these kinds, and these scales, of losses.
Initially, I did not wish to speak about Koyo biographically and mention the obvious solid work she did and continued to do to the very end. So many folks have already done that. And yet I'm compelled to step back into a portrait of her formative years, if only to make sense of her choices later in life.
Koyo Kouoh was born in Douala, Cameroon, in 1967. Though she moved to Zurich when she was 13 and went on to spend more than a decade in Switzerland, studying banking and business administration, her roots were firmly planted back 'home' in the continent.
She often spoke of the women in her life, particularly her seamstress grandmother, whose work gave her 'access to creativity'; her great-grandmother, who was forced into a polygamous marriage when she was still a teenager.
'My great-grandmother only had her hands and her intellect to raise her four children,' Kouoh told ARTnews. 'This is the family I come from. That is the essence of my feminism.' She would later channel that stealthy, African womanism in her life's work.
It irritates me no end when we in the media, and the arts space as a whole, hang on to neat, flawless narratives as though we are too careful not to disrupt the proverbial donkey cart.
In many testimonies since she passed on we are told a lovely trajectory of a young woman who, inspired by her conversations with Senegalese filmmaker Ousmane Sembène, decided to leave Europe and head back to Africa, Dakar specifically, where she founded RAW Material.
While all that is true, what is missing is the controlled rage. Kouoh had had enough of the European art spaces' parochialism and exclusion of non-European artists, its insistence on Europe's modernity, the so-called Enlightenment era, and perceived 'civilising' impulse.
She was ready to start the hard work of digging, of rediscovery of African genius. More than anything, as she said in so many interviews, she was concerned with celebrating, debating, championing and exulting in contemporary African art with Africans, for Africans.
Visionary: The late Koyo Kouoh curated the When We See Us: A Century of Black Figuration in Painting, at the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa, in Cape Town.
The Dakar Kouoh arrived at, in 1995, 20 years after the halcyon days of Étoile star bands, rollicking mbalax, Afro-Cuban merengue, the legendary Orchestra Baobab, Étoile de Dakar, Super Diamono, and more, was indeed impoverished. It was also a cauldron of aesthetic and intellectual ferment, with the percolating energy of 1960s Negritude, fashion and fertile public culture.
This is the Dakar of the Afro-futurist fashion designer Oumou Sy, of the hip-hop movement pioneered by Positive Black Soul, of the artists Issa Samb, and El Hadji Sy, and certainly of my late friend, the bohemian intellectual Djibril Mambety.
The Dakar that drew some of Africa's most electrifying minds to the think-tank Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa, theatre-makers to its stages. As a descriptor of intellectual and creative ferment, the phrase 'renaissance' has long been abused. I prefer boiling, ferment, heat. To wit, giving birth as a life-making project.
Kouoh's work as an innovator, an old-school 'community worker', in that Steve Biko/Mamphela Ramphele zanempilo's sense of obligation and commitment to communities.
It is a piercing reminder that ultimately art, visual or performance, is not about sashaying in and out of galleries with glass of wine in one hand and a mouse nibble of cheese in the other, or taking Instagram selfies.
Her vision of the power and connectivity, the impulse, of creation is never really about impulse but long-mediated, gestating, about thoughts as well as how environment, as well as dreams, shaped the artist.
In that sense, her curatorial approach and practice were always carried with a bigger purpose than the moment of display itself. See for example her group survey of the history of figuration, and portraiture, When We See Us: A Century of Black Figuration in Painting, at the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa in Cape Town.
Kouoh's curatorial practice always served as a reminder that the chain business of art, from conception to birth, from the gruelling process artists had to walk through to have their work displayed, read and theorised about, understood and misunderstood, was in the main, a matter of life and death.
Throughout her life, Kouoh — like other pioneering women in the culture space such as Bibi Silva, Bongi Dhlomo-Mautloa, the publisher Bibi Bakare-Yusuf, Susana Baca in Peru, the curator-dramatist Wiri Wiri Lekeng, the Wassolou singer Oumou Sangare, the artist Otobong Nkanga — understood that, by committing to do this work the way she did was to put her very life, her very health, on the block, sometimes, the commercial imperatives of the auction block.
She knew deep down that navigating the inconsistencies, as well as the incongruity of accessing the spiritual heft of art, in the extractive business that the art world has become, threw creators and those championing their work into a profound dilemma.
Not only did she put on groundbreaking shows, such as Johannes Phokela's Only Sun in the Sky Knows How I Feel (A Lucid Dream), she intrinsically knew how to navigate the thorn-strewn path of the art world. Unlike the in-vogue Insta-star curators who have emerged out of nowhere to steal artists' spotlights — curators with no appetite for the painstaking research, theory and writing work required in addition to administrative nous — Koyo Kouoh knew that art's glamour is fleeting.
With 35 years of experience as an exhibition-maker and writer, she had the life experience required to subdue her own status in deference to the artists she worked with.
Koyo Kouoh's Indigo Waves show at the museum.
Artists are not the easiest people to work with, even when visionary curators champion them, and why should they be easy to work with? Their demons and economic woes are insurmountable and often inscrutable. But Kouoh understood that. She understood the process of making art, as with the collaborative instinct of curatorial work, is gruelling work.
This work — invested with intellectual rigour, community-building, institute-building, shared belief in art as the ultimate saviour of humanity, art as not only a form of resistance but an exploration of joy, of survival, of thriving, art not just political but a spiritual force — all this inevitably takes its toll on the achievers.
Although the official cause of her death, according to a statement by her husband Philippe Mall, was cancer, it is also not unthinkable that her work claimed its pound of flesh. Her curatorial heroes Okwui Enwezor and Bibi Silva and, totally unrelated to the world of visual arts, Busi Mhlongo, along with many other African and black visionaries, succumbed to cancer.
We have to ask ourselves profound questions. Beyond Western science's theses on ailments such as cancer, is it possible that, as it affects African women and black folks in large numbers, statistically, could it be that cancer is also a somatic ailment of the soul?
Could it be that when our bodies cannot carry the often historical pressure of having to prove oneself 10 times more than others, the pressures that attend the need to validate why we deserve to be in spaces where, not so long ago, we were only appreciated as anthropological displays, curiosity inducing others, and not as agents tasked with staging the research that leads to staging art, the soul simply dumps its unresolved knots karmically into the flesh, in order to survive?
Is survival itself, a spiritually cancer-inducing life process intuited into flesh of the previously enslaved and colonised in disproportionate ways comparative to other creators?
I do not have the answers. What I know, from the experience of having been either the 'first black' or 'only black' in particular spaces throughout my career, and observing many far more achieving Africans than me, is that cancer manifests itself in multiple ways. Sometimes it colonises your entire being, not in the form of medically diagnosed cancer, but as a cancer of the spirit out to dim and wreak havoc on what the late anthropologist and friend of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Robert Farris Thompson, referred to as 'flash of the spirit'.
I met Kouoh quite late in her career, in 2018, at a Goethe-Institut event in Johannesburg. Of course her reputation preceded her, especially as the visionary builder behind Raw Material Company, a Dakar space and communal platform for the development, research, promotion and creation of, as well as discoursing on, contemporary African art.
Kouoh and I had mutual friends. When I saw this woman with red Bamako mud-clay, baby dreads, walking with a stick, visibly in pain but carrying herself regally, and with a sense of purpose, I knew it was Koyo Kouoh. I duly introduced myself by informing her that I was having a legal crisis, as well as crisis of confidence, regarding a major photography show I was working on, Half A Century of Winnie Mandela: In her Own Image.
She looked at me, and into me, and said something I will never forget.
'The fact that you have all these crises means you care enough about her, about this work. Go on and win her heart. The rest will curate itself.'
Which reminded me of George Clinton's words: 'Free your mind, and the ass will follow.'
We remained in touch, bonding and exchanging bon mots and curiosity on everyday life as a repository of as-yet unclaimed archives. The issue which entranced us, in particular, was lit up by my curiosity about a photo of her mother.
Those who were in her phone gallery would know that, for a long time Kouoh had a sepia photo of a beautiful, stylish woman, clad in the sort of 'cool', post-independence African print popular in the Fifties, as her WhatsApp profile pic.
The woman, in what seemed to be a Ghanaian 'kaba' blouse, and matching Java print skirt — a look popular in all of post-independence Africa, but not quite free of the long talons of colonialism — radiated freedom. She transmitted the serious gaze that was also de rigueur in the African street studios that pioneered portraiture, from Bamako to Abidjan to Lagos to Bobo-Dioulasso, and beyond, at the time. I was enraptured by this woman.
Is she your grandmother? I ventured. 'No, that's my mother. She understood style as an act of self-affirmation.'
'I'd love to meet her,' I said, in that casual fashion people express themselves privately on secured social media platforms. 'She reminds me of my own mother.' To which Kouoh, who anyone who knew her would tell you did not suffer fools gladly, just smiled, and shut off the conversation, with the words, 'Talk later, I'm at work. When are you coming to Cape Town?'
I'd be terribly remiss to claim Koyo Kouoh as a personal friend. She was like a big sister I never truly knew. I preferred to engage intellectually but accord her space. Perhaps that's not always the most generative way of building and sustenance, one learns now via the cruel event of death.
Although we kept in touch, mostly debating art and sharing photos throughout, the last time I saw Kouoh in person was at Zeitz MOCAA, in Cape Town, in 2023. The occasion of our meeting was a pre-exhibition seminar for the group showcase Indigo Waves and Other Stories: Re-Navigating the Afrasian Sea and Notions of Diaspora.
The exhibition — a testament to Kouoh's commitment to art collectives, collectivity and collaboration among indie-Genius communities, across the world — was a collaboration between Zeitz MOCAA, under Koyo's stewardship, and Gropius Bau and SAVVY Contemporary, in Berlin, Germany, as well as Vasl Artists' Association, in Karachi, Pakistan.
The composition of its curatorial team, namely Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung, Natasha Ginwala, with Michelangelo Corsaro, reflected aspects of the oceanic, ancient searching, surging too, spooling and respooling, telling its historical secrets of the 14th- to 19th-century human trade. Of songs drowned in its belly, of invisible ghosts swimming in tandem with sea creatures, of miscegenation and of love and disbelief encountered in its treacherous waters. From the long stretch of its East African coasts to its Asians, and creolised, archipelagos.
It remains one of the bravest exhibitions in the contested history of hydraulic Africana and Asiana. If the Bandung Conference received its grand gesture of baptism, more than half a century later, this was it.
And this was the reason that the last time I saw Kouoh was on stage, and she was not even there — in essence, she was pixellated within the intangible, but deeply felt stirring notes of waves, waves of sound.
Skin, Senegalese blue. A texture of refined chicory. Swiss chocolate had nothing on her. Teeth glistening with delight. A portrait of a love supreme. I remember it like it was yesterday.
I was holding her tight with both hands, performing some improvised African dance to an a-swirl, notes cascading, soul stirring vocals and the orchestral sweep of Salif Keita's Tekere, and to cool it down, we dislodged and I left my head, drifted, carried by oceanic vapour as I swayed, as though in a seance, enshrouded within the soaring vocals of the ritualistic anthem Kono.
In the company of Koyo Kouoh, especially once she had decided to accept you within her circle of spirits, as though she was the spirit conductor, ascension into a trance was possible even in broad daylight. Mostly because she didn't talk too much. Perhaps she did in the company of those she felt intimately at 'home' with. But to some of us distant fellow nocturnal dreamers, her quietude was inviting, never girded in judgment.
Dancing with our heads in the clouds, her frame towering over me rendered the whole thing playful, joyous and in tune with the overall sudden joie de vivre of the day. It was like an emergence. An emergence out of a blue ocean where all the conference attendees seemed to have been submerged, if not for that day, maybe as long as the ocean started drawing our ancestors into it all those centuries ago. It felt like we were in a wake. Instead of sorrow, we danced to Soro.
Ah, ah, ah, to experience joy radiating out of an intellectual and a creator's pores is something to behold.
We never say this enough about artists, intellectuals and community workers, simply because we have long jettisoned the language of beauty as an intrinsic force enough and, exuberant, within itself.
We talk of beauty in commercial, exploitative and extractive ways. I need to say it: Koyo Kouoh was a beautiful woman, a beautiful thinker, too.
Consider the following observation on the status of African cultures and the arts, especially half a century post independence: 'I am interested in working in making this practice recognised, respected, acknowledged, seen,' she said.
'I do not necessarily think the heightened visibility of African contemporary art is due to a heightened interest in the West.
'It is just due to an increased savviness of African art professionals. There are more professionals in the fields, doing amazing things.
'Ultimately, this is the cause for the attention.'
As a critic, essayist Bongani Madondo won the Film Resources Unit's Djibril Mambety Award for African Film Criticism. He writes on poetry, photography and politics, and is a photography critic at Conde Nast's The World of Interiors.

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Visionary with a camera: Rashid Lombard's lasting legacy
Visionary with a camera: Rashid Lombard's lasting legacy

Mail & Guardian

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Visionary with a camera: Rashid Lombard's lasting legacy

Caption: Rashid Lombard at the Cape Town Press Centre in Shortmarket Street, 1989, photo from the Shadley Lombard archive. Rashid Lombard was a legend among legends. A comrade, a stalwart, a hip jazz cat — he lived large, energetically, wildly seizing life by the horns, as if there was an urgency to do so. Lombard was a photojournalist working for the foreign press, capturing the darkest days of apartheid South Africa, but also a major contributor to culture whose name was synonymous with jazz in South Africa. He died on 4 June, at the age of 74. Tributes from all over the world poured from different aspects of his life — as a mentor, activist, photographer and organiser. All attest to his brilliant storytelling, because his life was so interesting and often unbelievable. His most striking characteristics were his charm, humour and how he was always working and able to accomplish a lot in a short time, making it impossible to capture all he did. He said about his youth, 'I liked money and I liked shoes. At high school, during holiday time, I'd be working in the shops in Athlone. I always had a job. I'd always find something to do.' Lombard was born in Port Elizabeth in 1951 and his family moved to Cape Town when he was 11 years old in 1962. His love for photography grew through art classes while attending Wittebome High in Wynberg and through an uncle interested in the art form. Apartheid prevented him from studying photography, but because he loved drawing, he got into architectural drafting. He landed a job at the construction giant Murray & Roberts, as an industrial photographer of architecture, shooting buildings around Cape Town. He soon got hooked on photography and started photographing political rallies. When we met for an interview at his home in Athlone, Cape Town in 2022, Lombard was joined by his daughter Yana, and the pair spoke as one unit, finishing each other's sentences. They were thick as thieves and partners in crime. To date, I have not witnessed a father-daughter duo so close and the interview was done jointly. Yana knew the context of each image spoken about and Lombard had had an incredible memory for detail, with the ability to rattle off names and dates that is rare. They spoke about his life highlights — his extensive photographic archive, iconic gigs, Nelson Mandela's release, the country's first elections, photographing rallies in the height of apartheid, meeting musicians from all over the world. Their stories were endless. Caption: Rashid Lombard greets his wife, Colleen Lombard on her release from section 29 at the Cape Town Courts after her successful bail hearing. Photo by Benny Gool. Upon entering his home, iconic, historic images lined the walls, alongside books and records. Excitedly, Lombard guided me to a backroom filled with archives, posters and history, and then another room, showing me a reel of negatives. 'The thing about learning from a photographer's perspective, is you get to see how they think,' he said. His negatives showed what his days would be like back in the height of apartheid repression. During the day, it was shooting at rallies and, at nights, in the smoky jazz clubs. 'That's why, in my contact sheets, you can see a funeral, then a party, then a gig. All the time I was photographing. I was at every gig,' Lombard said. 'The music was also linked to the political struggle. They were all involved. Not one musician ever said, 'No I can't play at this.' So you'd be at a funeral that afternoon and at night it would be a goomba [party]. We would be at a rally during the day, and then the jazz club at night.' And it is this statement that encapsulates how South Africa's struggle for freedom is intertwined with a legacy of jazz and politically charged figures. As a photojournalist during the Eighties, he founded the Cape Town Press Centre in the city centre with renowned photojournalist John Rubython, and documented for BBC, NBC, AFP and local publications like Grassroots and South. It was a facility where foreign media could come and work and they'd organised runners to guarantee safe passage into the townships. 'Everything was undercover. We ran that facility until Mandela was released in 1991.' The centre was across an important jazz and hip-hop venue and club called Jazz Den/The Base where activists would hang out. His peers were from the golden age of photojournalists, some have passed on: Peter Magubane, George Hallett, Omar Badsha, Rafs Mayet, Oscar Gutierrez and Gregory Franz. Lombard was married to the anti-apartheid activist Colleen Rayson, and though she has been ill for many years, she would often accompany him to jazz concerts in Cape Town. The couple met when she was 16 and the journalist Zubeida Jaffer describes them as 'a couple who were tied at the hip'. Lombard's three children — Yana, Chevan and Shadley — grew up with a great sense of photography and Shadley is also a photographer. Tributes for Lombard poured in from musicians, and from political figures, including President Cyril Ramaphosa, the Democratic Alliance and The Good Party. In 2014, he was awarded the National Order of Ikhamanga in Silver in 2014 for his role working in jazz internationally. Caption: The late poet James Matthews, writer & activist with Alexander Sinton High School students protesting outside their school in Athlone, Cape Town, during the nation-wide schools boycott in 1985. Photo by Rashid Lombard. He gave us stages Lombard loved music and, for as long as he was able to, he would attend gigs all over Cape Town. During his lifetime, he must have witnessed thousands of musicians playing. One of his greatest achievements is co-founding the largest jazz event in South Africa, now called The Cape Town International Jazz Festival. Originally called The North Sea Jazz Festival, he was director from 2000 to 2014, and Yana worked with him booking artists. He also co-founded EspAfrika in 1998, the company which runs the festival. Prior to that he started a jazz club called Rosies at the V&A Waterfront, with Rubython and Jimi Matthews. Later, Rosies would become the name of a stage at the jazz festival. He also worked in radio at Fine Music Radio and P4. On his tour to South Africa in May, drummer Kesivan Naidoo dedicated his performance at the Baxter Theatre to Lombard, based on their long friendship. He shared this tribute: 'Today, we lost a giant. Rashid Lombard was more than a cultural icon, more than a mentor, more than a visionary. He was a father figure to an entire generation of South African musicians. A fierce believer in the transformative power of jazz. A documentarian of our stories. A builder of dreams. He gave us stages when there were none. He opened doors where only walls existed … 'Thank you for believing in me. Thank you for believing in all of us. May your journey onward be filled with light — and may we honour your life by continuing to make music, take up space, and tell our stories, boldly.' Caption: Rashid Lombard with Kesivan Naidoo at The Bailey in Cape Town, January 2024. Photographed by Yasser Booley. The Lessons he left behind Lombard's skill was that of a brilliant connector; extremely driven and ambitious. In his presence, one felt that anything was possible and that there was a solution to every problem. He was deeply passionate about art, activism, education and photography and throughout his life opened doors for many and we owe so much to him for doing so. He nurtured musicians, but more importantly, an entire arts community. He was passionate about education and he used the jazz festival as a medium for that to happen. If it were not for Lombard, I would not be an arts journalist today. For many years, he ran two education programmes at his festival, one for arts journalism, taught by Gwen Ansell, and one for photography taught by many of his comrades, such as the late Peter McKenzie. This course was essential to my education as a journalist and set the trajectory for the rest of my life. For a week, culminating in the festival, students would learn how to document jazz. I attended the arts journalism course in 2009. It was so good, I attended again in 2012, and later did the Arts Journalism Mentorship course taught by Fiona Lloyd. About teaching this course Ansell says: 'Rashid was the reason the arts journalism course worked. He saw the strength of the idea immediately, and pulled out all the stops to make it work, including finding a budget for scholarships to draw in students from across Africa — and seeing visa issues for them were sorted out so they could negotiate sometimes difficult SA immigration procedures. 'And the first thing he agreed, right at the start of the very first programme, was that the festival would be totally hands-off on what students wrote, even if it was critical of the event. Not everybody else in festival admin agreed with him, but he defended that principle fiercely. 'That tells you about his politics — he not only understood, but lived, the role of the media as an agent of democracy and change. It really shows the decline of such political awareness since.' Lombard also realised the importance of documentation and annually released a publication with images of jazz photography, these included; Jazz Rocks: Six decades of music in South Africa ; All That Jazz — a pictorial tribute ; 10th Anniversary of the Cape Town International Jazz Festival and Jazz, Blues, Swing: Six decades of music in South Africa. An archive for all of us Lombard's interest in archiving started in 1986, after being awarded a study and travel grant to work at the prestigious Magnum Photos in New York. From 1987, he was the chief photographer for South Press , the first alternative, anti-apartheid weekly newspaper in Cape Town. Rayson worked with him, and started to help organise his archive but, soon after, she was detained by the apartheid authorities for five months. After she was released in 1988, she continued to organise the archive. Caption: Rashid Lombard with Nelson Mandela in Soweto, three days after his release from prison in February 1990. Photo supplied by the family. Our interview was about his passion and vision for a centre for photographers in South Africa — something that was desperately needed and an idea which Lombard worked on over the last decade of his life. After leaving the jazz festival, digitising his archive became the top priority. He later partnered with the National Archives and the Department of Sport, Arts and Culture to make the collection publicly accessible online as a national heritage resource. His daughter Yana will carry on the mission to ensure this work continues. Speaking about the memory required, and the need for photographers to have a personal hand in putting an archive together, Lombard said, 'You saw when I opened the file in the cupboard? 'I said, 'Oh there's Peter Magubane!' It does come back … I mean it's an important question. It's why it's so important to do this now with me, before I pass on. Let's face it, you're going to pass on at some time. So the urgency is now!' Realising the lack of opportunities and support for photographers, Lombard's dream was to create a space to teach younger students and have a mentorship programme with older photographers. He wanted to preserve, digitise and move the entire archive into a building, which would also house a darkroom and other amenities affordable to photographers. Caption: A group photo of South African photographers taken at Spier in 2021 including Fanie Jason, Oscar Gutierrez, Gregory Franz, Simon Shiffman, Aymeric Pelluguin and Siphiwe Mhlambi. Image supplied by Siphiwe Mhlambi. His archive consists of 500 000 film negatives, alongside video, audio and posters, collected over 50 years. 'The idea was, instead of leaving all my archives to my kids — because it belongs to them, it's in the family trust — isn't it irresponsible for us to give them the task? They might want to do other things in life. But somebody has to look after it. 'And if a university is the custodian … for the next 100 years, maybe the university is still there, so that is a spot to leave it at. It's linked to the family and linked to me, but it's going to be around and will be accessible.' For his dream, he said he wanted the best of everything: 'I don't touch anything if it's not state-of-the-art,' with the intention of setting up darkrooms and assuring, 'I will find the money for it.' 'We are writing a new curriculum, We are getting young people in to train them, we are setting up a darkroom, we're going to clean negatives. But we have complete control over it. We are going to set up a new centre. Get young people in to start looking at pictures, and work with older photographers. 'Get unemployed activists to look at the work and write about it. They might just look at the contact sheet and then take it further to younger people … How do you distribute that information by phone? So it's not just a place to study archives, it's a photographic centre.' Lombard had taken part in numerous exhibitions since the Seventies and photographed some of the most important people in South Africa's history. In 1994, he was the personal photographer to Nelson Mandela during the election campaign. Caption: Rashid Lombard, New York, 1986, photographed by Ernest Cole. Courtesy of the Rashid Lombard Archive (RLA) He made it a personal mission to seek out the great photographer Ernest Cole, and was one of the last to photograph him in 1986. Their touching meeting formed part of the 2024 documentary Ernest Cole: Lost and Found by Raoul Peck. Cole, who had not held the camera for a decade, borrowed Lombard's and photographed him. Lombard's presence and demeanor suggested that he was part of a different era. He lived through all the smoke, from the grit of smoky newsrooms, to running away from explosions and teargas, to the smoke of cigarettes blowing away at late-night jazz gigs. Through it all, his lens lifted the veil for the truth, of which we are so thankful for. We remember him for all that he taught us.

Cape visitors set to thrill at Aldo Scribante Raceway
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The Herald

timea day ago

  • The Herald

Cape visitors set to thrill at Aldo Scribante Raceway

An exciting change to this weekend's third round of the Algoa Motorsport Club's Regional championship is the addition of the Cape Town-based Kaltron Formula Supercars that are making the trip to Aldo Scribante Raceway. The cars that run a 2-litre Opel Motor were all built by the late Owen Ashley and celebrate their 30th year of existence next year. They will take part in three races, with the first two being for championship points and the third being a fun race where they will be joined by local Supercar racers Peter Schultz and Tom Hugo. A strong field of 20 modified saloons will be in action and sees legendary racer Syd Lippstreu with his immaculate Toyota Celica moving from the Retro Classic class and joining the modified saloons for the first time. The battle up front should once again be between the class B cars of Ian Riddle in his VW SuperPolo and Ian Oberholzer in his Volvo 850 station wagon as well as relative newcomer Elan Buchman in a VW SuperPolo. In the Wide Horizon Advance Training-sponsored Coastal Challenge for historics, classics and retro classics is Brent Watts, who is making a welcome return to circuit racing at Aldo Scribante Raceway in his Nissan Skyline and is set to give the similar Skylines of usual frontrunners Rane Berry and Tom Hugo a run for their money. East London visitor Neil Stephen returns with the only Opel Manta in the country that is racing and joins a whole fleet of classic Ford Escorts, Anglias and Capris as well as a classic VW Beetle with Henry Adams behind the wheel. Included in the mix are the street and fine cars with Barry Buchman in his Mercedes A45S and Ayrton Pilz in a Renault Clio 3 RS. Dylan Grobler returns to action after a short break in the open motorcycle class on his new 600cc Yamaha R6 and will be up against fellow 600cc competitors Ethan Diener, Ruan van Zyl and Ashton Heideman in what promises to be an epic battle on track. Kiera Potgieter is also back after taking a nasty tumble at the last round of the championship during qualifying and joins fellow girl racers Emma Diener and Kirsty Oberholzer in the CBR 150/250 motorcycle class where they will be up against Craig Benn, Dylan Grobler, Ruan van Zyl, Rob de Vos and Anthony Lippstreu Racing is set to start at 10.15am tomorrow and there will be three heats per class including the Ingco 45-Minute race that ends off the day and is set to start at about 4.15pm. Upcoming events: June 7: Main circuit racing at Aldo Scribante Raceway, round 3; Dirt Oval Racing in East London June 8: Speedyquip Bikers Breakfast Charity Run to Thornhill Hotel June 10: Algoa Indoor Karting League racing at Baywest Mall June 14: Motocross Training Day at Rover Motorcycle Club; Slake Enduro at Zwartenbosch Golf Estate in Humansdorp June 15: Youth Day Charity Spinning & Stance at Aldo Scribante Raceway; Top End Run at East London Grand Prix Circuit June 21: EP Off-Road championship round 2 at Innibos Lapa; Regional round 4 of Dirt Oval Racing at PE Oval Track Raceway; Algoa Kart Club round 4 of regional & club championship June 27-28: ROK Karting Nationals at Algoa Kart Club. The Herald

Photographer, cultural activist and jazz promoter Rashid Lombard dies
Photographer, cultural activist and jazz promoter Rashid Lombard dies

The Herald

time2 days ago

  • The Herald

Photographer, cultural activist and jazz promoter Rashid Lombard dies

Acclaimed photographer, cultural activist and jazz promoter Rashid Lombard died in Cape Town on Wednesday, surrounded by his loved ones. He was 74. Born on April 10 1951 in North End, Gqeberha, Lombard moved with his family to Cape Town in 1962. 'Originally trained as an architectural draftsman and later as an industrial photographer, he began his career with construction giant Murray & Roberts,' said family spokesperson Benny Gool. In 1970, Lombard married Colleen Rayson and the couple had three children. 'As a child in the Eastern Cape, Rashid experienced a diverse, harmonious community — black, white, Coloured, Indian and Chinese — until the brutal machinery of apartheid forcibly removed his friends to racially segregated areas, never to be seen or heard of again.' His political consciousness was later amplified through the influence of the Black Consciousness Movement. Lombard went on to work as a freelance photographer and television sound recordist during the height of the anti-apartheid struggle. 'His lens captured the unrest and hope of a nation in transition for international media outlets including AFP, the BBC and NBC.' Over the course of his career, he documented pivotal moments in South Africa's journey to freedom, including the rise of the democratic movement in the 1980s, the release of Nelson Mandela in 1990 and the country's first democratic elections in 1994. Gool said with democracy came the opportunity for Lombard to fully embrace his other great passion, jazz. He served as station manager at Fine Music Radio and later as programming manager at P4 Smooth Jazz Radio. In 1997, Lombard founded espAfrika, the events management company behind one of his most enduring legacies: the Cape Town International Jazz Festival, which he launched in 2000 and directed until his retirement in 2014. After stepping away from the festival, Lombard took over the digitisation of his archives, a task previously managed by his wife. He later partnered with the National Archives and the department of sport, arts and culture to make the collection publicly accessible online as a national heritage resource. Lombard's extraordinary archive — more than 500,000 film negatives, video and audio recordings — is now preserved at the University of the Western Cape. In 2010, Lombard published Jazz Rocks , edited by the late George Hallett. The book is a journey looking through the eye of Lombard's camera, capturing music, people and places that defined his life and work across the globe. He was honoured with numerous awards for both his contributions to news photography and his impact on music and tourism. In 2014, he was awarded the prestigious National Order of Ikhamanga in Silver 'for his excellent contribution to arts and culture and his dedication to promoting jazz music that has put South Africa on the map for many jazz enthusiasts around the world'. In 1986, legendary exiled photographer Ernest Cole, who had not held a camera for over a decade, borrowed Lombard's and turned the lens on him in a gesture of deep respect and recognition, Gool said. Asked in a later interview about his legacy, Lombard responded: 'No matter who you are — religion, race, male, female — you can achieve your dreams. I'm a true testament to that.' He is survived by his lifelong-partner Colleen Lombard, his sister Fazoe Sydow, his children and five grandchildren. Lombard will be buried according to Muslim rites. The Good Party extended its condolences to Lombard's family and said his contributions helped shape the soul of the nation. 'As the visionary behind the Cape Town International Jazz Festival, he brought global attention to Cape Town while ensuring that the event remained rooted in principles of inclusivity, access and development,' party leader Patricia de Lille said. She said during her time as Cape Town mayor, she had the privilege of working alongside Lombard. 'The jazz festival stood out not just as a world-class musical showcase but as an all-inclusive event that actively worked to build a more inclusive city, one that welcomed all, regardless of colour or creed,' De Lille said. TimesLIVE

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