If you went to Pieter Hugo's site, don't hesitate to comment here or send me an email to tell me what was your favorite serie and why. I am very curious about your vision !
Today's Shoot That Thursday is a very special one. Thanks to Ali, the blogger behind Style StreetStalker, I found a marvelous photographer. His name is Pieter Hugo and he is from South Africa. Why am I telling you where he is from ? Simply because his main subject is Africa and as an African himself I think seeing his vision of the continent really worth it. But I can't hide you that my choice to introduce him to you is also because I have african roots and it was impossible for me not to be touched by his pictures. Hence the reason why the format of today's post will be different, a mix between my own story and what I saw in Pieter Hugo's pictures.
I chose this photograph from the serie "The Hyena & Other Men" because it depicts a society which I don't know : the Gadawan Kura or Hyena handlers/guides. This scene takes place in Abuja, Nigeria, a country I don't know though it shares borders with Cameroon. In my country it is really rare to see people with animals at home or by the street and even less with a hyena ! So seeing this picture I just found it extraordinary. Not only in Disney's The King Lion hyenas are bad animals but also in the african culture in general. Usually they always have the role of the most vicious and bad one in fairy tales and I guess that they are still considered as such today knowing they are often shot for no particular reason by hunters. So I find this photograph very special because of this little baby girl tenderly sitted on the back of this hyena as if it was the cutest dog ever. Her gentle glance totally contrasts with the ferocious jaw its handler is making obvious. As soon as I saw this scene, I immediately thought that the knowledge of the Gadawan Kura was ancestral and that they certainly have some potions and prayers to prevent them from being bitten by the hyenas, I was also able to figure out that these men were some kind of traveling minstrels that were outcasts in Nigeria. The danger of having an oral culture is that History can be forgotten but the magic of it is that sometimes, just like in the case of the Gadawan Kura, it goes through time. I would probably be terrified if I were to meet them in person but still I would find them fascinating because in my eyes they embody the relationship between men and animals. I really advise you to pay a visit to Pieter Hugo's site and especially to this serie because you will see different facets of this relationship I am telling you about. Last thing, READ the texts accompanying the series, you won't be disappointed !
If you went to Pieter Hugo's site, don't hesitate to comment here or send me an email to tell me what was your favorite serie and why. I am very curious about your vision !
If you went to Pieter Hugo's site, don't hesitate to comment here or send me an email to tell me what was your favorite serie and why. I am very curious about your vision !