Loading...
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Photographer
Jansen van Staden
Some
Gomma Photography Grant 2023 Finalists

Gomma Photography Grant 2023

Some

Photographer

Jansen van Staden

Some

23 Feb, 2024

This book is a collection of photographs made between 2009 and 2022. I'm using David Goldblatt's seminal book, published in 1975, "Some Afrikaners Photographed" as the starting point of a conversation. Goldblatt’s book shows an Afrikaner nation in the midst of Apartheid. Confronting and deconstructing the superiority complex of the ruling white minority, Goldblatt was stunned by the contradictions of this group of peoples. Kind, resilient, staunchly religious, but oh so racist. These contradictions motivated him to look at the Afrikaner. I would like to contribute to this canon by adding my sentence to a never ending story. The book appears to have no author and the text in the book reads: "The photographs in this book were made by some Afrikaner person in South Africa. They are glimpses into his world and most of the subjects are other South Africans, but not necessarily Afrikaners…" I am the offspring. I am some Afrikaner. 

About the photographer

Jansen van Staden

b.1986 Potchefstroom, South Africa Strongly influenced by his skateboarding background, Van Staden uses street photography as a conceptual entry point to reflect on personal imaginaries and social constructs of belonging and disconnect. Van Staden became a fellow at the Photographers’ Masterclass of the Goethe Institut in 2017 and graduated in 2018. He received the CAP prize (2019) for his series "Microlight". Microlight, the book, was published in June 2022 , as winner of Charta Festival's Dummy Book Award, by Yogurt Magazine. 2022 saw Microlight as part of "If a Tree Falls in a Forest" at Recontres d'Arles as well as part of a dual exhibition entitled "Concurrent" alongside Thembinkosi Hlatshwayo at Galleri Image in Aarhus. His latest book "Some" has been shortlisted for both the 2023 Kassel Dummy Book Award and the 2023 LUMA Rencontres Arles Dummy Book Award. He lives and works in Cape Town as a lighting assistant.