http://www.axisgallery.com/exhibitions/photo/index.html

"Shooting Resistance"
South African Photography, 1976-94
Axis Gallery
453 West 17th Street, Chelsea, New York
Through March 16

February 1 - March 16, 2002

Held in celebration of Black History Month, the exhibition documents
the period of upheavals that began with the student-led Soweto
Uprising of 1976 and culminated in the collapse of the Apartheid
regime and the introduction of democratic elections in 1994.

The exhibition includes 65 images from 24 leading South African
photographers. It begins with Sam Nzima's famous 1976 photograph of
the corpse of Hector Petersen carried in the arms of a friend, after
being shot by police. It tracks the most repressive phase of the
Apartheid regime in the mid-1980s, when resistance gained momentum
although South Africa was placed under virtual martial law, and many
of the images on exhibition were outlawed. The photographic journey
ends with the final paroxysms of violence when political parties
jostled for power in the period between the release of Mandela in
1990 and the historic elections in 1994, which finally introduced
democracy.

Prints are available for sale individually or as a complete archive.
The exhibition is also available for travel within the United States,
where South Africa's historical struggle for civil rights resonates
with American history.

Photographers included:

Omar Badsha, Gille De Vlieg, Paul Grendon, Louise Gubb, Themba
Hadebe, Steve Hilton-Barber, Alf
Kumalo, TJ Lemon, John Liebenberg, Peter Magubane, Motlhalefi
Mahlabe, Greg Marinovich, Gideon Mendel, Santu Mofokeng, Nkosi
Nkosini, Sam Nzima, Ken Oosterbroek, J�rgen Schadeberg, Joao Silva,
Brent Stirton, Guy Tillim, Paul Velasco, Paul Weinberg, Graeme
Williams.

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