Photography in Sudan explained

Photography in Sudan refers to both historical as well as to contemporary photographs taken in the cultural history of today's Republic of the Sudan. This includes the former territory of present-day South Sudan, as well as what was once Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, and some of the oldest photographs from the 1860s, taken during the Turkish-Egyptian rule (Turkiyya). As in other countries, the growing importance of photography for mass media like newspapers, as well as for amateur photographers has led to a wider photographic documentation and use of photographs in Sudan during the 20th century and beyond. In the 21st century, photography in Sudan has undergone important changes, mainly due to digital photography and distribution through social media and the Internet.[1]

After the earliest periods in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, for which only foreign photographers have been credited with photographs or films of life in Sudan,[2] indigenous photographers like Gadalla Gubara[3] or Rashid Mahdi[4] added their own visions to the photographic inventory of the country from the 1950s onwards.[5] In 2017, the Sudan Historical Photography Archive in Khartoum started to build a visual inventory of everyday life from Sudan's independence in 1956 until the early 1980s.[6] As documented in the comprehensive exhibition at the Sharjah Art Foundation on "The making of the modern art movement in Sudan", this period also includes Gubara and Mahdi as photographic artists during the country's prolific period for modern art.

Since the end of World War II, professional photographers travelling the world, such as British photojournalist George Rodger, German filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl or photographer Sebastião Salgado from Brazil have created photographic stories of rural ethnic groups in southern Sudan that became famous in the history of photography in Sudan.[7] More recently, developments in tourism, global demand for photographs in mass media and the digital media of the 21st century have allowed an increasing number of Sudanese and foreign photographers to closely observe and record life in Sudan.

Colonial period – from pictures of 'natives' to real people

Early foreign photographers

The earliest existing photographs from Sudan were taken from the late 1840s onwards by French, British, Austrian or other foreign photographers and served as documents of life in Africa or the colonial enterprise. Among other archives, the digital collections of the New York Public Library have a number of such early photographs taken in the Sudan.[8] An archive of several thousand photographs, mainly taken by British officials and visitors during the years from 1899 and up to the 1950s, is kept at the Sudan Archive at Durham University in the UK.[9] The same university also holds several other archives of British colonial officers, including photographs from various cities and regions of Sudan, with an online catalogue.[10]

Following his travels to Upper Egypt, Eastern Sudan and Ethiopia in 18471848, French photographer and author of scientific and ethnographic publications Pierre Trémaux[11] published the second volume of his, dedicated to Sudan in 1862, including prints made from his photographs of people of Darfur, Sennar or the Nuba mountains.[12]

In the 1880s, the Austrian explorer and photographer Richard Buchta published several books in German about his travels along the Nile, including a large number of photographs of ethnic people in southern Sudan.[13] At the turn of 1884/85, the Italian-British photographer Felice Beato documented the unsuccessful Nile Expedition of the British Army that came to the aid of Charles George Gordon at Khartoum, who was besieged by Mahdist forces.[14] Following the short-lived Mahdist State, the Anglo-Egyptian conquest of Sudan provided new opportunities for photographs of British military and civilian officials. At that time, the early technology of photography was extremely difficult and expensive to use, as large format cameras and glass plates were used.[15]

Accompanying the Anglo-Egyptian re-conquest of Sudan from 1896 to 1898, war correspondent Francis Gregson documented both the advance of British troops and the victory of Lord Kitchener's troops over the Mahdist forces in Khartoum 1898, his album of 232 silver gelatin print photographs.[16] Among other photographs of defeated Sudanese, this includes a photograph of the commander at the Battle of Atbara, Emir Mahmoud, as a prisoner of war.[17]

In 19121913, new photographic technology in Sudan was used for aerial photography in archaeology, when British entrepreneur and amateur archaeologist Sir Henry Wellcome applied his automatic kite trolley aerial camera device during excavations at Jebel Moya, which was documented by several other photographs on this archaeological campaign.[18] [19]

Between 1926 and 1936, the British anthropologist E.E. Evans-Pritchard took thousands of photographs during his anthropological fieldwork in southern Sudan. About 2500 of his images, mainly showing the life of the Azande, Moro, Ingessana, Nuer and Bongo peoples are in the collection of the Pitt Rivers Museum, with many of them published online.[20]

Documenting the military activities of the Anglo-Egyptian condominium, photographs of soldiers and other military scenes, like the inspection of the Sudan Defense Force Guard of Honour, were taken during 1925 and 1955 and later collected in archives in the United Kingdom.[21]

A critical appreciation of these early non-Sudanese photographers and their interest in exotic images of Sudan is expressed in the following quote by Danish researcher Elsa Yvanez:[22]

Hugo Bernatzik's ethnographic photographs and book

In 1927, Austrian photographer and travel writer Hugo Bernatzik travelled by boat and his own automobile to southern Sudan. He returned with 1,400 photographs and 30,000 ft. of cinema film[23] and published his impressions and ethnographic pictures of Shilluk, Nuer and Nuba people in 1930 in a popular travelogue, first in German and later in English titled Gari Gari: The Call of the African Wilderness (1936). Thus, exotic images and descriptions of ethnic life in remote areas of southern Sudan became known to European audiences and were later followed by photo stories by George Rodger and Leni Riefenstahl.[24]

George Rodger's photographs of the Nuba and Latuka

A professional photojournalist, interested in traditional lifestyles in Africa, was George Rodger, a founding member of Magnum Photos.[25] His photographs were taken in 1948 and 1949 of indigenous people of the Nuba mountains in the Sudanese province of Kordofan as well as of the Latuka and other peoples of southern Sudan. In the introduction to the book Nuba and Latuka. The colour photographs, they were called "some of the most historically important and influential images taken in sub-Saharan Africa during the twentieth century."[26] As Rodger wrote several years later, "When we came to leave the Nuba Jebels (mountains), we took with us only memories of a people ... so much more hospitable, chivalrous and gracious than many of us who live in the 'Dark Continents' outside Africa."[27] In 1951, Rodger published his photo essay of this journey in National Geographic.[28] In the 1960s, his pictures prompted controversial German photographer and filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl to travel to the Nuba mountains for her own photo stories on the Nuba people.[29]

The first Sudanese photographers

As far as has been documented, one of the first professional Sudanese photographers and film cameramen was Gadalla Gubara, a pioneer of cinema in Sudan and Africa at large.[30] [31] During and after the Second World War, he filmed and photographed many current events, one of them being the raising of the Sudanese flag on the Day of Independence.[32] Another early Sudanese photographer was the self-taught photographer Rashid Mahdi.[33] [34] The French photographer, who also created his own photo stories in Sudan,[35] [36] called Rashid Mahdi "certainly the most sophisticated and one of the major African photographers of the XXth century". On his webpage, which claims to present a collection of about 12.000 digitized images from 1890 up to 2015,[37] Iverné has published many photographs by Rashid Mahdi, both in Inverné's own collection, as well as in the Musée du quai Branly in Paris.[38]

Commenting on the important change of representation in photographs of Africans in cities during the 1930s, the authors of the article An outline history of photography in Africa to ca. 1940, David Killingray and Andrew Roberts, have called this change "a shift to pictures of people, not 'natives.[39]

Post-independence (19562010)

The Golden Years of photography (1950s1980s)

The years before Sudan's independence in 1956 and up to the 1980s have been described as a prolific period for cultural life in Sudan, "including literature, music, and theatre to visual and performing arts".[40] Many Sudanese photographers of this important era are presented with a short biography and pictures on the website of the French photo archive Elnour.[41] The photographers described include Rashid Mahdi, Abbas Habiballah,[42] Fouad Hamza Tibin,[43] Mohamed Yahia Issa[44] and others. In an interview about his research in Sudan, Claude Inverné talked about this era of photography in Sudan.[45] Photographs by Gadalla Gubara and Rashid Mahdi were included in the exhibition at the Sharjah Art Foundation titled "The making of the modern art movement in Sudan" in 2017.

At the 6th African Photography Encounters held in Bamako in 2005, Sudan gained international recognition, when it was featured with a number of photographers active from 1935 to 2002.[46] [47]

Riefenstahl's photo books on the Nuba peoples

Riefenstahl travelled to the Nuba mountains in the 1960s and 1970s when she was over 60. On her return she published her colour images of Nuba people in traditional settings in two books titled Die Nuba (The Last of the Nuba) and Die Nuba von Kau (The People of Kau). For some of her photographs and film scenes, she relied on Sudanese cameraman Gadalla Gubara, who accompanied her to the Nuba mountains.[48] Both photo books became international bestsellers and attracted much attention to the archaic lifestyle of these ethnic groups.[49]

A critical reaction to Riefenstahl's photography of the Nuba came from the American writer Susan Sontag. Based on Riefenstahl's fascination with strong, healthy bodies and her 1930s propaganda films for the government of Nazi Germany, Sontag scrutinized the "fascist aesthetics" of these photo books in her essay 'Fascinating fascism'. Writing in the New York Review of Books in 1975, she stated: "The fascist dramaturgy centers on the orgiastic transactions between mighty forces and their puppets." This kind of criticism of the foreigner's view and interpretation of archaic African lifestyles was further elaborated in her collection of essays On Photography, where Sontag argues that the proliferation of photographic images had begun to establish a "chronic voyeuristic relation" of the viewers to the subjects portrayed.[50] Further, the German media critic Rainer Rother wrote "Riefenstahl viewed [the Nuba] as potential models and scanned the world before her eyes for spectacular images. Photography became something intrusive, a form of hunting."[51]

Travel photography and photojournalism

With the rise of colour photography, coffee table books and magazines specialising on lavish photo essays and international tourism, various styles of documentary photography evolved. In Sudan, this includes photo stories about its historic heritage, such as the Nubian pyramids.[52] The growing concerns of social repercussions of travel photography apply to professionals as well as to tourists and their private, amateur photography.[53] Culturally inappropriate behaviour of tourists has raised criticism with respect to taking photographs in non-Western countries, and of creating "exotic visions" of foreign cultures.[54] Sudan being one of the less visited, but more "exotic" destinations, is no exception to this.[55]

After having documented the culture of the Dinka people in South Sudan since the 1970s, American photographers Carol Beckwith and Angela Fisher have earned renown for their aesthetically crafted images of the Dinka's ancient ways of cattle raising. Their photo essay is presented online on Google Arts & Culture.[56] Similar images form part of Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado's work depicting archaic lifestyles in Eastern Africa.[57] In 2008, Australian photographer Jack Picone's published a book of photographs about his trip to the Nuba mountains, with text provided by anthropologist John Ryle.[58] [59]

As Sudanese have suffered from forced displacement, civil war or human trafficking, humanitarian crises have also been covered by photo journalists. UNMIS, the United Nations Mission in Sudan for Peacekeeping, WHO and UNICEF, usually employ their own professional photographers. Sudanese self-trained photographers like Sari Omer have also been employed for this kind of documentary photography, using their cultural knowledge of the populations concerned.[60]

In 1993, a shocking picture of a child, lying lifeless on the ground, and observed by a vulture sitting nearby, was published worldwide as a reminder of the human catastrophe in southern Sudan. The photographer Kevin Carter, a South African photojournalist, became known for the picture The Vulture and the Little Girl. Carter later said that he was shocked by the situation he had just photographed, and had chased the vulture away.[61] The following year, Carter won the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography for this picture, which had raised concerns about the ethical behaviour of the photographer, who had not tried to help the child.[62] [63]

The 2010s and beyond

Digital photography

Even though there are no institutions for teaching photography in Sudan, the new technical possibilities of digital photography, image editing and using the Internet for learning about how to take photographs have made it possible for a growing number of Sudanese to train themselves in photography. The spread of affordable mobile phones and Internet tariffs have led mostly younger Sudanese to start experimenting with digital cameras or mobile photography and to share their pictures or videos on social media.

In 2009, an informal group of aspiring photographers created the Sudanese Photographers Group on Facebook. The idea for this group was to have an easily accessible, virtual place for all interested photographers to meet and share ideas. In 2012, they decided to focus more seriously on the art of photography and found a partner for setting up workshop sessions in the German cultural centre in Khartoum. These workshops were conducted by professional photographers, invited from Germany, South Africa or Nigeria and repeated from 2012 to 2017, with assignments and meetings of the photographers in between the workshops. From this training, several photo exhibitions called Mugran Foto Week were organized.[64] Some of the photographers have been invited to international exhibitions such as the African Photography Encounters in Bamako or have received grants to study abroad. Sudanese photographers like Ala Kheir have also been involved with the Centers of Learning for Photography in Africa (CLPA), an independent network whose aim is to facilitate exchange between photographers of curriculum development and teaching methods.[65]

Commercial challenges and political expression

A limiting factor for professional photographers in Sudan is the low demand for commercial photography. Companies using professional photographs of Sudanese settings are DAL Group,[66] that promotes Sudanese food products and local traditions,[67] as well as Internet service providers such as MTN[68] or Zain.[69] Despite such constraints, Sudanese freelance photographers have experimented with street photography and fine-art photography.[70]

After the Sudanese revolution of 2018/19, new chances for artistic expression, public action or citizens' involvement in society have opened up. An example of photography used to illustrate political participation in Sudan was the smartphone image of the Kandake of the Sudanese Revolution, of the student Alaa Salah, taken by amateur photographer Lana Haroun during the 2019 protests.[71] Another well-known image of these protests is a photograph by Japanese photographer Yasuyoshi Chiba of Agence France-Presse, showing a young man in Khartoum reciting protest poetry, while demonstrators chant slogans calling for civilian rule, that was selected as World Press Photo of the Year 2020.[72] [73] In 2022, an image by Sudanese photographer Faiz Abubakr Mohamed of a woman protestor hurling a teargas canister back at riot police during pro-democracy protests in Sudan in 2021 was awarded with the first prize in the "Singles Category for Africa" of the World Press Photo contest.[74] In 2022, Ammar Abdallah Osman won the First Place of the East African Photography Awards in the Human Singles category for his portrait Man with Nobody.[75]

Contemporary photographers

Contemporary Sudanese photographers of the 2010s and beyond include professional photojournalists Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah, who has covered Sudan for Reuters for more than 15 years and is also known for his creative fine-art photography,[76] and Ashraf Shazly,[77] who works for AFP/Getty Images in Khartoum.

Other photographers, mainly active in non-commercial photojournalism, such as street photography or documenting cultural life through fashion or other lifestyles, are women photographers Salma Alnour,[78] Ola Alsheikh,[79] Suha Barakat, Eythar Gubara,[80] Metche Jaafar, Duha Mohammed[81] or Soleyma Osman, as well as their male colleagues Ahmad Abushakeema,[82] Mohamed Altoum,[83] Salih Basheer, Nagi Elhussain, Hisham Karouri, Ala Kheir,[84] Sharaf Mahzoub, Sari Omer, Atif Saad, Muhammad Salah,[85] or Wael Al Sanosi aka Wellyce.[86] Most of them are members of the Sudanese Photographers Group, and have been part of Sudan's upcoming generation of photographers since the 2010s.[87]

In 2021, the French book Soudan 2019, année zéro presented a detailed historical and sociological documentation and analysis of the weeks during the Sudanese revolution that preceded the deadly assault and destruction of the site that protestors had occupied in front of the headquarters of the Armed Forces in central Khartoum. Part of this documentation of the Khartoum massacre are numerous pictures by Sudanese photographers who had documented the uprising until that point in time.[88] From July to September 2021, the international photography festival Rencontres de la photographie at Arles in southern France announced an exhibition on the Sudanese revolution under the title 'Thawra! ثورة Revolution!. It presented images by some of the Sudanese photographers who contributed to the book Soudan 2019, année zéro.[89] During this festival, Eythar Gubara won the photography award (Prix de la photo Madame Figaro - Arles) for her photo story "Nothing can stop the Kandakas" (title of the queens in ancient Nubia), sponsored by French women's magazine Madame Figaro.[90] This award entailed a fashion photo editorial by Gubara, published in the magazine's July 2022 edition.[91]

As a literary reflection about documentary photography of political events, South Sudanese writer Stella Gaitano described the intentions of a fictional photographer taking pictures during the Sudanese revolution:[92]

2023 Postcards from Khartoum

Following the 2023 armed conflict in Sudan, Ala Kheir, Ola Alsheikh and other Sudanese photographers started the online project Postcards from Khartoum. Amidst the destruction of their cities, thousands of people fleeing the fighting and shortages of food, water and electricity, they have been publishing their pictures and brief commentaries as "an insight to what is going on in their lives since the 16th of April 2023."[93]

Collections and online archives

Starting in 2018, the online archive and cultural heritage project Sudan Memory has been conserving and promoting Sudanese cultural heritage both physically in the country itself, as well as since April 2022 through the Internet. Among many other documents, the project's webpage offers access to numerous photographs documenting Sudan's political and cultural history as well as its natural and demographic diversity from the early 1900s to the present.[94] The country's largest photographic archive, Rashid Mahdi's photo studio in Atbara is featured with hundreds of photographs documenting the region's private, public and economic history from the 1940s to 1990s. Gadalla Gubara (1920–2008), Sudan's internationally most well-known photographer and filmmaker, is shown working in his studio, and the street art of the 2019 Sudanese revolution is presented through more than 60 images.[95]

Historical photographs of Sudan are also available online from a number of international collections, such as Durham University (photographs and documents),[96] Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford, (detailed catalogue of ethnographic photographs from southern Sudan),[97] both of whom are also contributors to Sudan Memory. Further, the Museum of Ethnology in Vienna presents historical photographs by Richard Buchta, an Austrian explorer and early photographer.

In her essay "The Sudanese gaze: Visual memory in post-independence Sudan", Sudanese-American writer Dalia Elhassan discussed the complex relationships that historical photographs and films from Sudan play in constructing knowledge about this East African country. Accordingly, both for people like herself, who live in the Sudanese diaspora, as well as for Sudanese at home and of different generations, these images "captured by a Sudanese lens, a Sudanese gaze" relate directly to questions of cultural identity, blackness, history and their perceptions in Sudanese literature, visual arts and the media.[98]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Diallo. Aïcha. 2016-10-29. Where the White Nile and the Blue Nile meet. 2021-03-21. Contemporary and. en.
  2. Book: Sharkey, Heather J.. Living with colonialism: nationalism and culture in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. 2003-03-18. University of California Press. 978-0-520-23559-5. 56–57. en. Heather J. Sharkey.
  3. Web site: Iverné. Claude. 2015. Gadalla Gubara. 2020-05-27. elnour.org. en.
  4. Web site: Iverné. Claude. 2015. About Rashid Mahdi. 2020-05-27. elnour.org. en.
  5. Web site: Sharjah Art Foundation. 2017. The Khartoum school. The making of the modern art movement in Sudan.. 2020-05-24. Sharjah Art Foundation.
  6. Web site: The British Library . 2017-10-17 . Creation of historical photography archive at the history department of Khartoum University . 2019-11-26 . The British Library. Endangered archives programme . en.
  7. Compare, for example, the following quote: "Indeed, probably the best known books of photographs of the Sudan are of the Nuba, Leni Riefenstahl's The Last of the Nuba and People of Kao..." (pp. 59-60) in Book: Daly. Martin W.. Images of empire: photographic sources for the British in the Sudan. Hogan. Jane R.. 2005. Brill. 978-90-04-14627-3. en. and the chapter George Rodgers Koronga Nuba wrestlers of Kordofan, South Sudan, 1949 (pp.18-19) in Book: McCabe, Eamonn. The making of great photographs: approaches and techniques of the masters. 2005. David & Charles. 978-0-7153-2220-8. en.
  8. Web site: New York Public Library digital collections. "Sudan photographs" . 2020-06-03. digitalcollections.nypl.org.
  9. In their book, The Sudan: Photographs from the Sudan Archive, the authors have published 240 photographs, presenting "events of historical or military significance, feats of engineering, and the daily life and recreation of the Sudanese and their temporary rulers." Book: Daly. M. W.. The Sudan: photographs from the Sudan Archive, Durham University Library. Forbes. L. E.. Archive. Durham University Library Sudan. 1994. Garnet Publishing. 978-1-873938-94-2. en.
  10. Web site: Durham University. Special collections : The Sudan Archive at Durham. 2020-05-25. Durham University Library.
  11. Web site: New York Public Library. Pierre Trémaux. Photographers' identities catalog. 2021-03-11. New York public library.
  12. Trémaux, Pierre. Voyage en Éthiopie, au Soudan Oriental et dans la Nigritie, Vol. 2: Le Soudan, textes de l'Atlas, Paris, Hachette 1862. - For a discussion of his photographs, see Addleman-Frankel . Kate . The Experience of Elsewhere: Photography in the Travelogues of Pierre Trémaux . Photographies . 2018 . 11 . 1 . 31–56 . 10.1080/17540763.2017.1399287. 192293462 .
  13. For his publications, see the list in the article on Richard Buchta and some of his photographs can be found in Wikimedia Commons under his name.
  14. In the book Felice Beato: A photographer on the Eastern Road, the authors give the following short account: 1885 - Beato travels to the Sudan to photograph the events of the Mahdist rebellion against the British, but arrives three months after the major events. On April 30, he meets Lord [Baron] G.J. Wolseley onboard ship from Suez to Suakim. (sic) He documents Wolseley's expedition to Suakim to superintend the withdrawal of the troops. Book: Lacoste. Anne. Felice Beato: A photographer on the Eastern Road. Beato. Felice. J. Paul Getty Museum. 2010. Getty Publications. 978-1-60606-035-3. 186. en.
  15. In his article "Capturing the light of the Nile" about the earliest photographs taken in Egypt, Jeff Koehler makes the following remarks about the photographic technology of the late 19th century: "The technology continued to improve and diversify, and the paper negatives were soon superseded by glass ones in the wet-collodion process that combined the sharpness of daguerreotypes with the reproducibility of calotypes." See Koehler 2015, in the section 'Further reading'
  16. Web site: Khartoum 1898 c.1899. 2021-03-20. Royal Collection Trust.
  17. Web site: General Kitchener and the Anglo-Egyptian Nile campaign, 1898. 2021-03-12. Imperial War Museums.
  18. Web site: Wellcome Foundation Library. Jebel Moya. 2020-05-24. Wellcome Library. en.
  19. The 1905 book by John Ward, Our Sudan - its pyramids and progress. J. Murrey, 1905 presents information and photographs on archaeological sites in Sudan around the turn of the century and before.
  20. Web site: Biography information for Pritchard at the Southern Sudan Project . 2022-04-16 . southernsudan.prm.ox.ac.uk.
  21. Ahmed A. Sikanga (1983). “The Sudan Defence Force, Origin and Role, 1925-55.” Occasional Paper by the University of Khartoum’s Institute for African and Asian Studies.
  22. Web site: Sudanese clothing through the modern lens. Yvanez. Elsa. 2018-05-21. TexMeroe Project. en-US. 2019-12-11.
  23. 1936-11-02 . Africana . TIME Magazine . 28 . 18 . 70–71.
  24. W. . R. . 1936 . Review of Gari Gari: The Call of the African Wilderness . The Geographical Journal . 88 . 6 . 561–562 . 10.2307/1787093 . 0016-7398 . 1787093.
  25. Web site: 2017-03-05. The Nuba: Early color work. George Rodger. 2020-05-23. Magnum Photos. en-US.
  26. Web site: 2017. George Rodger. Nuba & Latuka. The colour photographs.. 2020-05-23. Magnum photos.
  27. Web site: Schuman. Aaron. 2017-06-05. 'Lost' early color photographs of Sudanese tribes published. 2020-05-23. CNN.
  28. Web site: National Geographic. 2014-11-28. Wrestling keeps 'identity of the Nuba' alive in Sudanese refugee camps. https://web.archive.org/web/20200519001140/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/11/141128-nuba-wrestlers-refugee-sudan-culture-tradition-infocus/. dead. 19 May 2020. 2020-05-23. National Geographic News. en.
  29. Web site: Holocaust education & archive research team. 2010. Leni Riefenstahl. 2019-12-11. Holocaust research project.
  30. Web site: 2017. Gadalla Gubara. Biography. 2019-12-13. Studio Gad Archive. en.
  31. Web site: Korinth. Nadia. The omega man: Gadalla Gubara and the half-life of Sudanese cinema. 2020-05-23. Bidoun. en.
  32. Omar Zaki wrote in his article Sudan: Gadalla Gubara - a Forgotten Filmmaking Legend: "Gubara and fellow scriptwriter Kamal Ibrahim, were the only cameramen to record Sudan's Independence on January 1st 1956. He captured the symbolic moments when democratically elected Prime Minister Ismail Al-Azhari walked from the parliament to the presidential palace and replaced the British and Egyptian flags with the blue, gold, and green flag of Sudan." - See Web site: Zaki. Omar. 2012-09-14. Sudan: Gadalla Gubara - a forgotten filmmaking legend. 2019-12-13. All Africa. en.
  33. In an article about the exhibition "The Khartoum School: the making of the modern art movement in Sudan (1945–present)" in Sharja, UAE, 2017, the author writes about photography in Sudan: "The exhibition highlights the work of two pioneer master-photographers, Rashid Mahdi and Gadalla Gubara, as well as other studio photographers, for example, Abbas Habib Alla, Mohamed Yahya Issa, Fouad Hamza Tibin, Osman Hamid Khalifa, Omar Addow, Richard Lokiden Wani and Joua, in the context of the historical linkages between photography, decolonisation and self-representation." Source: Web site: The Khartoum School: the making of the modern art movement in Sudan (1945–present). 2020-05-24. Sharjah Art Foundation.
  34. Web site: Krishna Kumar. N.P.. 2017-01-04. Exploring the modern art movement of Sudan. 2020-05-24. Cornell University. Africana studies and research center.
  35. Web site: Claude Iverné: Bilad es Sudan. Aperture Foundation NY. Aperture Foundation NY. en-US. 2019-12-12.
  36. Web site: Inverné. Claude. 2015. Claude Iverné. 2019-12-11. Elnour. en.
  37. Web site: Inverné. Claude. 2015. About Elnour. 2020-05-16. Elnour. en.
  38. Web site: Inverné. Claude. 2015. Rashid Mahdi. 2019-12-11. Elnour. en.
  39. Killingray. David. Roberts. Andrew. Andrew D. Roberts . 1989. An outline history of photography in Africa to ca. 1940. History in Africa. 16. 197–208. 10.2307/3171784. 0361-5413. 3171784. 161286756 .
  40. Web site: Sharjah Art Foundation. 2015-03-31. Modernity and the making of identity in Sudan: Remembering the Sixties and Seventies. 2021-03-20. e-flux. en.
  41. Web site: Inverné. Claude. 2015. Photographers. 2019-12-11. Elnour. en.
  42. Web site: Inverné. Claude. 2015. Abbas Habib Alla Abdellateef Abdalla. 2021-04-05. en, fr.
  43. Web site: Inverné. Claude. 2015. FHT-29b. 2019-12-23. Elnour.
  44. Web site: Inverné. Claude. 2015. Fouad Hamza Tibin / Mohamed Yahia Issa. 2019-12-11. Elnour. en.
  45. Web site: Bernard. Sophie. 2021-03-01. Discovering Sudanese Photography. 2021-04-01. Blind magazine. en.
  46. Book: Njami, Simon . VIes rencontres africaines de la photographie - Bamako 2005 un autre monde/another world . Editions Eric Koehler . 2005 . 2-7107-0725-X . Paris . 140–155 . fr,en.
  47. Web site: de Faÿs. Didier. 2005. Sixth African photography encounters: Another world. 2020-06-07. Bidoun. en.
  48. Web site: Inverné. Claude. 2015. Gadalla Gubara. Elnour. 2019-12-11. en.
  49. Web site: Ryle. John. 1982-09-30. Invasion of the body snatchers. 2020-06-03. John Ryle. Reportage & criticism. en-US.
  50. Book: Sontag, Susan. On photography. Penguin Books. 1977. 978-0-7139-1128-2. London. 11.
  51. Book: Rother, Rainer . Leni Riefenstahl: The Seduction of Genius . 2003-07-01 . Bloomsbury Publishing . 978-1-4411-5901-4 . 144 . en.
  52. Web site: Furcoi. Sorin. 2015-04-05. Pictures of Sudan's forgotten Nubian pyramids. 2019-11-26. Aljazeera.
  53. Web site: Pratt. Suzie. 2015-02-01. What defines an amateur versus a professional photographer?. 2019-11-26. Digital photography school. en-US.
  54. Web site: Bond. Simon. Travel photography ethics: When you shouldn't take that picture. 2019-11-26. ExpertPhotography. 28 April 2018 . en-US.
  55. Web site: Sudan travel. 2021-04-05. Lonely Planet. en.
  56. Web site: "Dinka: Legendary cattle keepers of Sudan". African ceremonies. Google Arts & Culture. en. 2019-11-26.
  57. Web site: Dinka group at Pagarau, Southern Sudan. Sebastião Salgado. 2019-11-26. Artspace. en.
  58. Web site: Jack Picone and John Ryle. 22 December 2008. The Nuba. Granta. Granta Publications. 17 December 2016.
  59. Web site: Sudan The Nuba. 2021-04-05. Jack Picone Documentary Photographer. en-US.
  60. Web site: UNICEF. April 2018. UNICEF Sudan health & nutrition factsheet. 2019-11-27. UNICEF. en.
  61. Before taking his plane, Carter told Silva: "You won't believe what I've just shot! … I was shooting this kid on her knees, and then changed my angle, and suddenly there was this vulture right behind her! … And I just kept shooting – shot lots of film!"Then Carter told him that he had chased the vulture away. He told Silva he was shocked by the situation he had just photographed, saying, "I see all this, and all I can think of is Megan", his young daughter. A few minutes later, they left Ayod for Kongor. - In 2011, the child's father revealed that the child was actually a boy, called Kong Nyong, and had been taken care of by the UN food aid station. Source: Web site: Kong Nyong, el niño que sobrevivió al buitre = Kong Nyong, The boy who survived the vulture. Rojas. Alberto. 21 February 2011. El Mundo. es. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20170630053614/http://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2011/02/18/comunicacion/1298054483.html. 30 June 2017.
  62. Web site: Hadzialic. Dr Sabahudin. 2019-10-26. Media ethics in professional journalism: the case of Kevin Carter. 2021-04-05. Eurasia Review. en-US.
  63. Claiming responsible ethical behaviour of photographers, publishers and the viewers of such photographs of shocking scenes, cultural writer Susan Sontag wrote in her essay Regarding the pain of others (2003): "There is shame as well as shock in looking at the close-up of a real horror. Perhaps the only people with the right to look at images of suffering of this extreme order are those who could do something to alleviate it … or those who could learn from it. The rest of us are voyeurs, whether or not we mean to be." Source: Susan Sontag, Regarding the Pain of Others. New York: Picador/Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003
  64. Web site: Mugran foto week 2016: "Modern Times". 2021-03-20. Qantara.de - Dialogue with the Islamic World. en.
  65. Web site: Launch of the first phase of the 'Survey on photography training and learning initiatives on the African continent'. 2019-12-10. Contemporary and. en.
  66. Mann. Laura. 2013. 'We do our bit in our own space': DAL Group and the development of a curiously Sudanese enclave economy. The Journal of Modern African Studies. 51. 2. 279–303. 10.1017/S0022278X13000207. 0022-278X. 43303986. 154513426.
  67. Web site: Al-Shafee. Rogia. 2017-11-28. Sudan's traditional foods festival: a varied, rich nutritional culture. 2020-06-07. Sudanow magazine.
  68. Web site: Home. 2020-06-07. MTN Sudan. en-US.
  69. Web site: Photo gallery. 2020-06-07. Zain Sudan.
  70. See the video by Goethe-Institut Sudan (2015-11-14), especially from minute 1:00 to 2:00 and 3:30 to 5:00
  71. Web site: Ahmed. Kaamil. 2019-04-14. Scared, worried and hopeful: A Sudanese photographer's view of the uprising. 2020-05-27. Middle East Eye. en.
  72. Web site: 2019-06-19. Yasuyoshi Chiba. 2020-04-22. World Press Photo.
  73. News: 2020-04-16 . World Press Photo 2020: Image from Sudan uprising wins . en-GB . BBC News . 2022-12-23.
  74. Web site: World Press Photo Africa winner: 'This is a victory for all Sudanese' . 2022-04-03 . Radio Dabanga . 28 March 2022 . en.
  75. News: Gilbert . Sarah . 2022-10-21 . The best of East African photography 2022 – in pictures . en-GB . The Guardian . 2022-10-22 . 0261-3077.
  76. Web site: Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah. 2019-11-26. Reuters The wider image. en.
  77. Web site: Two people killed in Sudan rally over 2019 protest killings. 2021-05-30. www.aljazeera.com. en.
  78. Web site: Salma Alnour. 2019-11-26. Salma Alnour. 13 October 2015 . en.
  79. News: 2018-08-22. 'I'm a woman with a camera – it surprises people'. en-GB. BBC News Africa. 2019-11-26.
  80. News: 2019-07-26. Africa's week in pictures: 19-25 July 2019. en-GB. BBC News. 2021-07-06.
  81. Web site: Les Rencontres d'Arles. Duha Mohammed. 2021-06-04. www.rencontres-arles.com.
  82. Web site: Opaluwa. Ladi. 2016-07-08. Photography: a thousand faces of modern Sudan. 2019-12-10. This is africa. en-US.
  83. News: James. Estrin. 2019-03-18. A photographer's quest to discover his Nubian ancestry. en-US. The New York Times. 2019-11-26. 0362-4331.
  84. Web site: Kheir. Ala. Ala Kheir - about me. 2019-11-26. Ala Kheir. en-US.
  85. Web site: I want to be visible. 2019-11-26. Arab Documentary Photography Program.
  86. This list is by no means complete, but wants to name some of the most active and visible Sudanese photographers of today. Pictures of most of them can be found on Instagram.
  87. Web site: 2016. Mugran foto week 2016 – photo exhibition Modern Times. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20171124135813/https://www.goethe.de/ins/su/en/kul/sup/mug.html. 2017-11-24. 2019-11-27. Goethe-Institut Sudan.
  88. Bach, Jean-Nicolas, Fabrice Mongiat et al. 2021. Soudan 2019 : Année zéro. Paris: Soleb and Bleu autour publishers, 244 p. with numerous photographs., (in French)
  89. Web site: Les Rencontres d'Arles. 2021. THAWRA ! ثورة REVOLUTION !. 2021-07-06. www.rencontres-arles.com.
  90. Web site: Meffre . Anne-Claire . 2021-07-03 . Prix Madame Figaro Arles 2021 : zoom sur les 8 photographes nominées . 2021-07-11 . Madame Figaro . fr.
  91. Web site: 2022-12-23 . Samb Fatou by Eythar Gubara for Madame Figaro July 1st, 2022 - fashionotography . 2022-12-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221223082059/https://www.fashionotography.com/eythar-gubara-madame-figaro-july-1st-2022/ . 23 December 2022 .
  92. Web site: Gaitano. Stella. 2019-10-28. The Rally of the Sixth of April. 2021-11-21. The Museum of Modern Art. en.
  93. Web site: Postcards from Khartoum . 2023-06-19 . André Luetzen.
  94. Web site: Topics - Sudan Memory . 2022-04-19 . www.sudanmemory.org.
  95. Web site: Street art Khartoum - Sudan Memory . 2022-04-19 . www.sudanmemory.org.
  96. Web site: Gotto . Francis . Guides: Archives and Special Collections: Sudan Archive: Home . 2022-04-02 . libguides.durham.ac.uk . en.
  97. Web site: Southern Sudan Photo and Object Collections at the Pitt Rivers Museum . 2022-04-19 . southernsudan.prm.ox.ac.uk.
  98. Web site: Elhassan . Dalia . May 2020 . The Sudanese Gaze: Visual Memory in Post-Independence Sudan . 2022-05-12 . SUNU JOURNAL . en-US.