Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Peter Sexford Magubane OMSS (18 January 1932 – 1 January 2024) was a South African photographer and anti-apartheid activist. He was also the personal photographer of President Nelson Mandela . Early life
Peter Magubane, the renowned artist-photographer who shed light on the everyday struggles of Black South Africans for decades under apartheid, died on Monday. After joining Drum magazine in 1955 ...
Ana Afonso, 47, Portuguese model and actress (Quinta das Celebridades), suicide by jumping. [106] Ayla Algan, 86, Turkish singer and actress (The House of Leyla, O Hayat Benim, Binbir Gece), intracerebral haemorrhage. [107] Marty Amsler, 81, American football player (Chicago Bears, Cincinnati Bengals, Green Bay Packers). [108]
Magubane died Monday, according to the South African National Editors' Forum, which said it had been informed of his death by his family. The South African government said Magubane “covered the ...
Despite the prospect of being arrested and assaulted, Kumalo kept on taking pictures, sometimes at personal cost. David Hazelhurst recalled: One day in 1963, when I was editor of Drum magazine, Alf Khumalo walked into my office carrying a picture. It showed a burly policeman delivering a vicious kick between the legs of reporter Harry Mashabela ...
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
Magubane is a surname found in South Africa. Notable people with this surname include: Bernard Magubane (21930 – 2013)], a South African sociologist and anti-apartheid activist; Emmanuel Magubane (active 1999 – 2014), a South African politician; Peter Magubane (1932 – 2024), a South African photographer
This includes some of Peter Magubane's work. 2010 – Ernest Cole: Photographer – Although not the first, this was the largest retrospective of his work displayed in Johannesburg at the Johannesburg Art Gallery. The exhibition was a homecoming of sorts for Cole's legacy, as many of his photographs previously had been banned in apartheid South ...