Ernest Cole (born in Transvaal, South Africa, 1940; died in New
York, 1990) is best known for House of Bondage, a photobook
published in 1967 that chronicles the horrors of apartheid. After
fleeing South Africa in 1966, he became a “banned person,” settling
in New York. He was associated with Magnum Photos and received
funding from the Ford Foundation to undertake a project looking at
Black communities and cultures in the United States. Cole spent an
extensive time in Sweden and became involved with the Tiofoto
collective. He died at age forty-nine of cancer. In 2017, more than
60,000 of Cole’s negatives—missing for more than forty
years—resurfaced in Sweden.
Mongane Wally Serote is a renowned South African poet and writer,
inaugurated in 2018 as South Africa’s national poet laureate.
Oluremi C. Onabanjo is an associate curator in the Department of
Photography at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. The former
director of exhibitions and collections for the Walther Collection,
New York, Onabanjo has organized exhibitions across Africa, Europe,
and North America, and managed one of the most significant private
collections of photography in the world. In 2017, she cocurated
Recent Histories: Contemporary African Photography and Video Art
and edited its accompanying publication, which was shortlisted in
2018 for an ICP Infinity Award in Critical Writing and Research.
Onabanjo lectures internationally on photography and curatorial
practice, and her writing appears in Aperture, The New Yorker, The
PhotoBook Review, Tate Etc., as well as publications by the Art
Institute of Chicago; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Rhode Island
School of Design, Museum of Art, Providence; and the Studio Museum
in Harlem, New York; among others. A 2020 Andy Warhol Foundation
Arts Writers grantee, Onabanjo is the editor of the forthcoming
photobook Marilyn Nance: Last Day in Lagos (2022). She is a PhD
candidate in art history at Columbia University, New York, and
holds degrees in visual, material, and museum anthropology from
Oxford University, England, and African studies from Columbia
University, New York.
James Sanders is a journalist, researcher, and scholar. He has
written extensively on South African politics, in such books as
South Africa and the International Media, 1972-1979: A Struggle for
Representation (1999) and Apartheid’s Friends: The Rise and Fall of
South Africa’s Secret Service (2006). He worked as a research
specialist on Anthony Sampson’s Mandela: The Authorised Biography
(1999), and on numerous documentary films, including Mandela: The
Living Legend (2003) and Mandela’s Gun (2016). He served as a guest
editor of Noseweek and was the founding editor of Molotov Cocktail.
Sanders has concentrated his research on the life of Ernest Cole.
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