Thursday, June 10, 2010

This time for [South] Africa

There has been talk about how there may be a tendency to assume that the World Cup of South Africa is the realistic picture of the continent of Africa. Maybe the Shakira's lyrics should be changed to "this time for [South] Africa". Africa is a continent with several different countries with their own culture and traditions. One day I will make my way to that continent...*squeezes eyes shut and clicks heels*...one day.

For those who more of an indepth picture of South Africa check out The Bicycle Portraits.

"The Bicycle Portraits project was initiated by Stan Engelbrecht (Cape Town, South Africa) and Nic Grobler (Johannesburg, South Africa) early in 2010. Whenever they can, together or separately, they’re on the lookout for fellow commuters, and people who use bicycles as part of their everyday work, to meet and photograph. They’re finding out who rides bicycles, why they ride bicycles, if and why they love their bicycles, and of course why so few South Africans choose bicycles as a transport option. There is no specific range of questions asked, they'd rather just establish a conversation around the rider’s life and where his or her bicycle fits into it." ~Quote & picture taken from The Bicycle Portraits website

"Why we are doing this...

As you'll see we are not photographing people who ride purely for exercise or recreation, but instead we are focussing on those who use bicycles as an integral tool in their day-to-day existence. We've noticed that in South Africa, especially in the major centers, very few people use bicycles as mode of transport. This is very strange since we have no proper public transport infrastructure, and that which does exist is expensive and unsafe. Given all the benefits of cycling - independence, fitness, cost-effectiveness, environmentally friendly - we would love to encourage the use of bicycles in South Africa amongst all social classes.

We've noticed that as our major centers develop there still seems to be a trend to make cities more friendly for cars, not people. While this might be happening in many places around the world the effect on individuals seems to be very dramatic in a country like South Africa, where there is a growing divide between those who can afford motorised transport and those who struggle to. Owning a bicycle in this social climate can be very empowering, if the correct infrastructure exists.

As you might know, South Africa is a world within one country, home to various cultures, with a tragic history of segregation and racism. Through this project we hope to give people a glimpse into each other lives through a well known object of movement, practicality and joy - the bicycle. Looking at individuals through their, sometimes unconscious, involvement in bicycle culture, we will inadvertently touch on many charged issues like the implementation of public space, lack of infrastructure development and also social problems like class division and unequal wealth distribution, but also perhaps bring those unfamiliar to each other together in their love for a simple thing...

Our long term goal...

Through publishing this book, we want to be able to assist the underprivileged cycling community through our project - be it teaching bicycle maintenance skills, providing necessities like helmets, tires, tubes, locks… It would be great to create a support structure for the people who appear in the book - this could be a trust funded by a percentage from sales of the cover price, or a charity set up in the name of the people who appear in the book etc. Ultimately we want to promote cycling as a means of independent transport to empower the underprivileged, and in fact, to encourage everyone capable to ride a bike as an alternative to driving a car, or even using public transport. We hope that this will lead to the kind of infrastructure development that is designed with all people in mind, not just cars." ~ Picture taken from The Bicycle Portraits website; Quote taken from The Bicycle Portraits Kickstarter page



If you pledge to help fund this project, you are essentially pre-ordering a book. To pledge or to get more information check out their Kickstarter page.




2 comments:

  1. You are a good blogger.

    And I miss you.

    Here's the deal:

    1. I'm currently wearing my power suit with power stripes and power tie.
    2. E-Beth is borrowing the camera for when she goes to Kenya. Yes, yes, I know your mouth just dropped. We didn't find the camera battery, so we're going to order it online. If we would have known that ahead of time then you would have the camera. Boo, I know.
    3. Haven't dropped the bomb on Steve Austin about purchasing the camera. I will though when we talk about camera batteries.
    4. I written report of all conversations and steps to be taken will be transcribed and sent to your people's email account for approval.
    5. Love LOve LOVE you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I try with all the blogging. I'm a newbie...so there's much to learn.

    Miss you more.

    ReplyDelete