14 Nov 2024 - 18 Jan 2025
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Goodman Gallery is delighted to present part one of a three-part exhibition between the UK, Europe and South Africa by the late Ernest Cole. In collaboration with the Magnum Gallery, Paris and the Ernest Cole Family Trust, House of Bondage: Vintage works from the Ernest Cole Family Trust will present rare vintage prints by Cole that reveal the astonishing breadth of work created by the photographer during his brief career.


Following two major exhibitions in London at The Photographer’s Gallery and Autograph, and Cole’s publications House of Bondage and The True America, published by Aperture in 2022 and 2023, this show provides perspectives from South Africa and the wider continent, with artists, writers and curators examining Cole’s methodology and offering new insights into his work.
Part l will take place at the London gallery this November. Part ll and lll will be shown in Magnum Gallery, Paris and Goodman Gallery, Cape Town, respectively, in January and February next year. While all three exhibitions include vintage prints selected from House of Bondage, each exhibition will be unique.

Over a period of seven years, Cole captured in his photographs, the myriad forms of violence embedded in the everyday life of the Black majority under Apartheid: at work, in the mines, in education, healthcare and on the street.
Ernest Cole - House of Bondage: Vintage works from the Ernest Cole Family Trust - Part 1

Cole’s book House of Bondage, which came out to significant attention in 1967, exposed the horror of the Apartheid regime. In 1966 Cole fled South Africa, smuggling his negatives out of the country, to eventually settle in New York where House of Bondage was published the next year alongside a powerful introduction by Joe Lelyveld, the South African correspondent of the New York Times, who was himself expelled from South Africa in 1966.


Shown across all three cities for the first time is a body of work titled "Black Ingenuity", a photo essay which was excluded from House of Bondage. Following the discovery of Cole’s archive and vintage prints in 2017, this essay has only belatedly recognised and situated Cole amongst the avant garde of the time.

Ernest Cole - House of Bondage: Vintage works from the Ernest Cole Family Trust - Part 1

In a series of images taken in the informal and formal spaces permitted to Black creative expression and cultural activity taking place under apartheid. Images of artists attending exhibition openings and racially mixed political rallies and dance troupes, offer a new way of looking at the grim but ever mutating world of apartheid.


A pair of images show Cole attending an exhibition opening of Gladys Mgudlandu’s landscape paintings possibly at the Adler Fielding Gallery, amongst artistic and literary milieu. Photographed are artists Dumile Feni and Louis Maqhubela, alongside journalist Nat Nakasa. A group, who like Cole (unbeknown to him at the time) would go on to live and work in exile outside of South Africa. Works in this chapter highlight Cole’s desire to acknowledge the cultural production at the time - with a particular focus on Johannesburg’s Dorkay House - a beacon of creativity as the home of African Music and Dance Association. The building was inextricably linked with the arts scene of the 50s and 60s - a period of great creativity where artists, musicians and actors found a safe space for artists to perform and develop talent outside of formal education and venues which were barred to them.

Ernest Cole - House of Bondage: Vintage works from the Ernest Cole Family Trust - Part 1
Ernest Cole - House of Bondage: Vintage works from the Ernest Cole Family Trust - Part 1
Ernest Cole - House of Bondage: Vintage works from the Ernest Cole Family Trust - Part 1

One of his most recognisable chapters from House of Bondage is represented with a series of images from “The Mines”; Cole’s photographic essay captures the strategic and long-form effects of dispossession and racialised spatial division.


A series of striking images in high contrast show the organisation and warehousing of black labour underground. Large groups of men photographed in tightly constrained space, allude to the contraction of economic opportunity and the dehumanising effects of the mine industry.

Ernest Cole - House of Bondage: Vintage works from the Ernest Cole Family Trust - Part 1
Cole’s images of Black South African experience under apartheid, demonstrate remarkable skill.

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Working clandestinely, Cole was able to produce striking compositions that effectively communicated the psychological effects of oppression and created space for vital story telling, paving the way for successive generations of activist and front line photographers from South Africa. His legacy continues to inspire artists dealing with the ongoing consequences of apartheid its racial and spatial segregation that persist to this day.


The Ernest Cole Family Trust is delighted to present to a global audience this rare series of vintage prints from its holdings in South Africa, featuring iconic and unseen images from Ernest Cole’s groundbreaking House of Bondage series, to be exhibited in three shows in London, Paris, and Cape Town by both the Goodman Gallery and the Magnum Gallery. Lost to the family for many years they offer a new insight into Ernest’s seminal practice as South Africa’s premier anti-Apartheid photographer, and we hope that their inclusion in these shows will provide a new understanding of his work and legacy. - Leslie Matlaisane, Ernest Cole Family Trust

Ernest Cole - House of Bondage: Vintage works from the Ernest Cole Family Trust - Part 1
ernest-cole
B. 1940, Eersterust, South Africa
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