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Lost and Found’ Clip Immerses You in His Anti-Apartheid Photography

Lost and Found’ Clip Immerses You in His Anti-Apartheid Photography

Check out a clip from Oscar-nominated filmmaker Raoul Peck’s ‘Ernest Cole: Lost and Found.’ The new documentary chronicles the life and work of Ernest Cole, one of the first Black freelance photographers in South Africa, whose early pictures, shocking at the time of their first publication, revealed to the world Black life under apartheid. The documentary is available on digital platforms like Apple TV, Prime Video, Fandango at Home, Google Play, DirecTV, and on Blu-Ray, DVD, and On Demand from Magnolia Home Entertainment.


https://www.magpictures.com/ernestcole/

Cole fled South Africa in 1966 and lived in exile in the U.S., where he photographed extensively in New York City, as well as the American South, fascinated by the ways this country could be at times so vastly different, and at others eerily similar, to the segregated culture of his homeland. During this period, he published his landmark book of photographs denouncing the apartheid, ‘House of Bondage,’ which, while banned in South Africa, cemented Cole’s place as one of the great photographers of his time at the age of 27.

After his death, more than 60,000 of his 35mm film negatives were inexplicably discovered in a bank vault in Stockholm, Sweden. Most considered these forever lost, especially the thousands of pictures Cole shot in the U.S. Telling his own story through his writings, the recollections of those closest to him, and the lens of his uncompromising work, the film is a reintroduction of a pivotal Black artist to a new generation.


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