Paul Alberts 1946 - |
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Early Life: In 1965 he traveled to Europe and lived in Paris. He worked as a journalist on various newspapers (Die Vaderland, Die Transvaler, The Cape Argus, Die Burger). At Die Burger he was attached to the paper’s arts page. In 1975 he turned to freelance photography with his main interest being social documentary and theater photography. Since 1981 he dedicated himself also to the publishing of social documentary photography and special interest books.
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Invitation image for 'The Mask' by Paul Alberts -
South Photographs, Soweto 1983 | ||||||||||||||
Career: His exhibition of portraits of South African artists at the Goodman Gallery in 1979, was the first exhibition at this prestigious gallery where photography was presented as art. In 2000 a major retrospective exhibition of his work was presented at Oliewenhuis Art Museum in Bloemfontein. This exhibition was afterwards staged at the Bensusan Museum of Photography at MuseumAfrica in Johannesburg (during February and March 2001) and at the Sanlam Art Gallery in Bellville (during April and May 2001). A major exhibition marking his 60th birthday – Buite die Hekke van Eden – was staged at Oliewenhuis Art Museum in Bloemfontein in April 2006. The Afrikaans author Hennie Aucamp contributed specially written quatrains for the exhibition. He has also contributed to a number of major group exhibitions including some of which were shown in the USA’s major cities, as well as in the United Kingdom and Europe. Later Life: In 2003 he was assigned by the War Museum in Bloemfontein to edit and compile a major exhibition, Suffering of War, that depicted the suffering of both Boer and British soldiers, as well as citizens, animals and the countryside during the Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902). The exhibition was staged at Oliewenhuis Art Museum in Bloemfontein in 2003 and in Moscow, Russia, in June 2004. The exhibition has been staged in all the major centres in South Africa during 2004, inter alia at the Castle in Cape Town (September 2004), at Aardklop Arts Festival in Potchefstroom (September 2004) and the Voortrekker Monument in Pretoria (November 2004). A prestigious hardcover book, Suffering of War, was published in October 2003. The text was written by Col Frik Jacobs, internationally acclaimed expert and historian on the Anglo-Boer War and Director of the War Museum. Paul Alberts wrote a chapter on the history of combat photography. Alberts compiled and edited an Afrikaans translation (Die Smarte van Oorlog) of Emily Hobhouse’s famous book The Brunt of the War and Where It Fell in 2005. As photographic editor of the book, he was responsible for the digital restoration of more than 250 photographs, many of which were never published before. In December 1999, Alberts was elected by the University of the Free State as one of one hundred leading South African citizens of the Free State and the Northern Cape of the past millennium. In March 2002 he was awarded a Medal of Honour for his work as social documentary photographer by the South African Academy of Science and Arts. He is currently completing a revised edition of Some evidence of things seen: Children of South Africa, with a major section on HIV/AIDS in South Africa. Editor: Shirley Mabusela, former Deputy Chairperson at the Human Rights Commission and trustee at the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund. Protea Boekhuis will be publishing Buite die Hekke van Eden in April 2007. His clients include prominent companies and organisations such as the Independent Development Trust, Idasa, South African Breweries, the Hans Merensky Foundation, Eskom, Telkom, Transnet, The National Electricity Regulator, NewHco and GTZ (the German Government’s aid organisation). The focus of his work is social documentary. C V Eight photographic books of his work has been published: Die Klein Karoo: 'n Legkaart, Tafelberg-Uitgewers, Kaapstad, 1977 (teks: Abraham H De Vries) In Camera: Portraits of South African Artists, H.A.U.M., Cape Town, 1979 (text: André P Brink). In Kamera: Portrette van Suid-Afrikaanse Kunstenaars, H.A.U.M., Kaapstad, 1979 (teks: André P Brink). Children of the Flats, Reijger Publishers, Cape Town, 1980 (text: George Gibbs) This book was published in commemoration of the United Nation’s International Year of the Child and internationally distributed. The Borders of Apartheid, The Gallery Press, Cape Town, 1983 (compiler of text: P Alberts) The Forgotten Highway (through Ceres and the Bokkeveld), The Gallery Press, Cape Town, 1988 (text: Dene Smuts) (The book was also published in Afrikaans.) Die Vergete Grootpad (deur Ceres en die Bokkeveld), The Gallery Press, Kaapstad, 1988 (teks: Dene Smuts) South African Military Buildings Photographed: An Historical Heritage, The Gallery Press, Cape Town, 1993 (compiled and photographed by Paul Alberts; Foreword by Mr Justice M R de Kock, Chairman: National Monuments Council). Some evidence of things seen: Children of South Africa, Open Hand Press, Rivonia, 1997. (Introduction: Nelson Mandela; Text, among others, by Desmond Tutu, Albie Sachs, National Children’s Rights Committee, Unicef.) Faces of Age, Kraal Publishers, Brandfort 2005. (Editor: Tom Manthata.) His work (together with other photographers or as illustration) was also published in: Nichts Wird Uns Trennen (Nothing Will Separate Us), Benteli Verlag, Bern, 1983 (editor: Tim Besserer) Meditation: a path to consciousness, Human & Rousseau, Cape Town, 1997 (text: Merwede van der Merwe) Lighting Up South Africa: A Century of Electricity Serving Humankind, Open Hand Press, Bloemfontein, 2000 (text by the National Electricity Regulator). Moving in Time: Images of Life in a Democratic South Africa, KMM Review Publishing Company, Sandton, 2004 (editor: George Hallatt; text: Mandla Langa) Last updated May 2007 |
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