Ernest Cole: The True America

Ernest Cole: The True America

Regular price $65
Sale price $65 Regular price 0% Off

Stock: In Stock Out of Stock Unavailable
This item ships free! free-shipping
Ships: Ships in 7–14 Days question-icon Created with Sketch. ?

The first publication of photographs taken by Ernest Cole in the United States during the turbulent and eventful late 1960s and early 1970s

After fleeing South Africa to publish his landmark book House of Bondage (1967) on the horrors of apartheid, Cole resettled in New York. He photographed extensively on the streets of New York City and documented Black communities in cities and rural areas of the United States--traveling across the country in the months leading up to and just after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. The pictures reflect both a newfound freedom Cole experienced in America and an incisive eye for the inequalities of systemic racism. He released very few images from this body of work while he was alive, and the pictures were thought to be lost entirely until the negatives resurfaced in Sweden in 2017. This treasure trove provides an important window into American society and establishes Cole's place in the history of American photography.


Binding Type: Hardcover
Author: Ernest Cole, Raoul Peck (Text by (Art/Photo Books)), James Sanders (Text by (Art/Photo Books))
Published: 01/06/2024
Publisher: Aperture
ISBN: 9781597115346
Pages: 312
Weight: 3.95lbs
Size: 11.70h x 8.70w x 1.20d

About the Author
Cole, Ernest: - Ernest Cole (born in Transvaal, South Africa, 1940; died in New York, 1990) is best known for House of Bondage, a photobook published in 1967 that chronicles the horrors of apartheid. After fleeing South Africa in 1966, he became a "banned person," settling in New York. He was associated with Magnum Photos and received funding from the Ford Foundation to undertake a project looking at Black communities and cultures in the United States. Cole spent an extensive time in Sweden and became involved with the Tiofoto collective. He died at age forty-nine of cancer. In 2017, more than six thousand of Cole's negatives--missing for more than forty years--resurfaced in Sweden.
Peck, Raoul: - Raoul Peck is a director, screenwriter, and producer.
Sanders, James: - James Sanders is a journalist, researcher, and scholar. He has written extensively on South African politics, in such books as South Africa and the International Media, 1972-1979: A Struggle for Representation (1999) and Apartheid's Friends: The Rise and Fall of South Africa's Secret Service (2006). He worked as a research specialist on Anthony Sampson Mandela: The Authorised Biography (1999), and on numerous documentary films, including Mandela: The Living Legend (2003) and Mandela's Gun (2016). He served as a guest editor of Noseweek and was the founding editor of Molotov Cocktail. Sanders has concentrated his research on the life of Ernest Cole.
Et al...

8.70" L x 1.20" W x 11.70" H

This item ships parcel via UPS, FedEx, or DHL, and a signature is required for packages valued over $200. Large quantities, however, may ship using one of our trusted freight carriers, for which a delivery appointment will need to be scheduled.

Please contact help@trnk-nyc.com with any additional questions regarding shipping or delivery.

  • Description
  • Dimensions
  • Shipping Information
  • Financing
  • Reviews
  • share
  • The first publication of photographs taken by Ernest Cole in the United States during the turbulent and eventful late 1960s and early 1970s

    After fleeing South Africa to publish his landmark book House of Bondage (1967) on the horrors of apartheid, Cole resettled in New York. He photographed extensively on the streets of New York City and documented Black communities in cities and rural areas of the United States--traveling across the country in the months leading up to and just after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. The pictures reflect both a newfound freedom Cole experienced in America and an incisive eye for the inequalities of systemic racism. He released very few images from this body of work while he was alive, and the pictures were thought to be lost entirely until the negatives resurfaced in Sweden in 2017. This treasure trove provides an important window into American society and establishes Cole's place in the history of American photography.


    Binding Type: Hardcover
    Author: Ernest Cole, Raoul Peck (Text by (Art/Photo Books)), James Sanders (Text by (Art/Photo Books))
    Published: 01/06/2024
    Publisher: Aperture
    ISBN: 9781597115346
    Pages: 312
    Weight: 3.95lbs
    Size: 11.70h x 8.70w x 1.20d

    About the Author
    Cole, Ernest: - Ernest Cole (born in Transvaal, South Africa, 1940; died in New York, 1990) is best known for House of Bondage, a photobook published in 1967 that chronicles the horrors of apartheid. After fleeing South Africa in 1966, he became a "banned person," settling in New York. He was associated with Magnum Photos and received funding from the Ford Foundation to undertake a project looking at Black communities and cultures in the United States. Cole spent an extensive time in Sweden and became involved with the Tiofoto collective. He died at age forty-nine of cancer. In 2017, more than six thousand of Cole's negatives--missing for more than forty years--resurfaced in Sweden.
    Peck, Raoul: - Raoul Peck is a director, screenwriter, and producer.
    Sanders, James: - James Sanders is a journalist, researcher, and scholar. He has written extensively on South African politics, in such books as South Africa and the International Media, 1972-1979: A Struggle for Representation (1999) and Apartheid's Friends: The Rise and Fall of South Africa's Secret Service (2006). He worked as a research specialist on Anthony Sampson Mandela: The Authorised Biography (1999), and on numerous documentary films, including Mandela: The Living Legend (2003) and Mandela's Gun (2016). He served as a guest editor of Noseweek and was the founding editor of Molotov Cocktail. Sanders has concentrated his research on the life of Ernest Cole.
    Et al...

  • 8.70" L x 1.20" W x 11.70" H

  • This item ships parcel via UPS, FedEx, or DHL, and a signature is required for packages valued over $200. Large quantities, however, may ship using one of our trusted freight carriers, for which a delivery appointment will need to be scheduled.

    Please contact help@trnk-nyc.com with any additional questions regarding shipping or delivery.

  • Liquid error (snippets/product-tab line 457): include usage is not allowed in this context
View full details