Guy Tillim

South Africa lahabali tira ni lahabali sabira

Guy Tillim (bɛ dɔɣi o la yuuni 1962) ka o nyɛ South Africa anfooni yaara ŋun tuma zaa jendi Sub-Saharan Africa.[1][2] Tillim nyɛla bɛ ni daa dɔɣi so Johannesburg yuuni 1962.[3][1][2] O karim la shikuru siɣisi University of Cape Town yuuni 1983, ka daa tum Market Photo Workshop yuuni Johannesburg.[4][2][1] O tuma nyɛla din chaŋ tiŋ'duya pam ka lahi be o bukunima ni.[5][6][7]

Guy Tillim
Johannesburg (en) Translate, 1962 (run 61/62)
O ya TiŋgbaŋSouth Africa
Education
Shikuru shɛli o ni chaŋUniversity of Cape Town (en) Translate
Michaelis School of Fine Art (en) Translate
Bala yɛlibu, sabbu bee buɣisibuSilmiinsili
Tuma
Tumafoot ŋmara, photojournalist (en) Translate, lahabali sabira ni artist (en) Translate
Pin' shɛŋa o ni dee
Nira zaŋtiAfrapix (en) Translate

"Website" din yuli din booni African Success buɣisi o mi niSouth Africa "anffoni yaara ŋun yuli du, ka Daily Maverick mi buɣisi o "arguably SA's finest photographer" di yi niŋ ka David Goldblatt nu yi.[3][8][9][10]

Piligu Tuma

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Tillim kpela afooninima tuma ni yuuni 1986.[11][8][3] Until 1990, o tumya ni Afrapix collective, South Africa anfooninima yaabu laɣingu, ka lahi tum ni South Africa anfooni yaabu baŋdiba kamani David Goldblatt, Steve Hilton-Barber, ni Omar Badsha.[12][13][11][8][3] O tum ti o ya lahabali wuligiriba mini tiŋ'duya lahabali wuligiriba, kamani Reuters (1986 -1988) ni Agence France Press (1993 -1994).[11][14][3].[15][4][12][16] O mini ban daa tumdi lala saha zaa tuma daa dalim la South Africa.[12][4]

Publications

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  • Jo'burg. Johannesburg: STE Publishers, 2001. ISBN 978-2350460147. Photographs taken in and around Johannesburg.
  • Departure. Cape Town and Johannesburg: Michael Stevenson Contemporary, 2003.
  • Kunhinga Portraits. Cape Town and Johannesburg: Michael Stevenson Contemporary, 2003. Photographs taken in the town of Kunhinga, Bié Province, Angola, featuring portraits of displaced Angolans fleeing government forces in February 2002, during the final months of the Angolan Civil War.
  • Leopold and Mobuto. Filigranes Editions, 2004. ISBN 978-2914381918.
  • Petros Village. Rome: Punctum, 2006. Photographs documenting daily life over a two-week period in the village of Petros, central Malawi.
  • Congo Democratic. Renate Wiehager; Cape Town and Johannesburg: Michael Stevenson; Rome: Galleria Extraspazio, 2006. A photojournal of the events surrounding the contested presidential election held in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in July 2006, during which supporters of the incumbent Joseph Kabila clashed with those of Etinenne Tshisikedi.
  • Avenue Patrice Lumumba. Prestel, 2008. ISBN 978-3791340661. Photographs taken in Mozambique, DR Congo, Madagascar, Angola and Benin during 2007/8. With introductions by both Tillim and Robert Gardner.
  • Roma, Città di Mezzo. Rome: Punctum, 2009. ISBN 978-8895410296. Photographs taken in and around the capital city of Rome in Italy, originally commissioned for the international Roman photography festival, FotoGrafia.
  • Second Nature. Prestel, 2012. ISBN 978-3791346908.
  • O Futuro Certo. Göttingen: Steidl; The Walther Collection, 2015. ISBN 978-3-86930-649-0. Selections from Tillim's various publications of the previous decade, including Mai Mai Militia in Training, Jo'burg, Avenue Patrice Lumumba, and Second Nature.[17]
  • Edit Beijing. Paris: Bessard, 2017. Photographs of people on the streets of Beijing made over a two-week period. Edition of 500 copies.

Exhibitions

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  1. Links in this quotation have been added for this encyclopedia entry

Kundivihira

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Guy Tillim.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Guy Tillim.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Poplak 2011.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Gutberlet, Marie-Hélène (2018). "Presentness, Memory and History". In Helff, Sissy; Michels, Stefanie (eds.). Presentness, Memory and History: Thabiso Sekgala, "Homeland". Global Photographies. Memory – History – Archives. Transcript Verlag. pp. 69–88. ISBN 978-3-8376-3006-0. JSTOR j.ctv1wxt5s.8. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  5. Tate. Guy Tillim born 1962 (en-GB).
  6. O'Donnell Hulme, Mary (2018-07-10). Guy Tillim: Biography (en).
  7. LensCulture, Guy Tillim |. Guy Tillim.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 African Success 2007.
  9. Poplak, Richard (2011-05-18). Floating worlds: SA photographer relocates the African modern (en).
  10. About Success Afrika - Only Books (en-US).
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Guy Tillim | Peabody Museum.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 HAYES, PATRICIA (2007). "Power, Secrecy, Proximity: A Short History of South African Photography". Kronos (33): 139–162. ISSN 0259-0190.
  13. Mary, O'Donnell Hulme. Guy Tillim: Biography.
  14. Agence VU - Guy Tillim.
  15. Gaule, Sally (2006). "Guy Tillim: Joburg downtown". De Arte 41 (73): 43–50. DOI:10.1080/00043389.2006.11877053.
  16. Zegeye, Abebe (2003-03-01). "Amulets and Dreams: War Youth and Change in Africa". Social Identities 9 (1): 37–50. DOI:10.1080/1350463032000075326. ISSN 1350-4630.
  17. O Futuro Certo - Guy Tillim (en).
  18. Michael Stevenson.
  19. Guy Tillim.
  20. Daimler Art Collection (en-US) (2014-02-14).
  21. Guy Tillim, winner of the Leica Oskar Barnack Award 2005 - LOBA (en).
  22. Michael Stevenson.
  23. Christian Rattemeyer on the 27th São Paulo Bienal (en-US).
  24. "Guy Tillim", Michael Stevenson Gallery website
  25. Guy Tillim at The Goodman Gallery Johannesburg - Artmap.com.
  26. Arnet Worldwide Corporation. Guy Tillim (South African, born 1962): Timeline (en).
  27. Africa Remix (de).
  28. Daimler Art Collection (en-US) (2014-02-16).
  29. STEVENSON | Guy Tillim.
  30. Africa, Art South. The Divine Comedy: Heaven, Hell, Purgatory revisited by Contemporary African Artists - Art Africa Magazine (en-GB).

Bibliography

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