George Rodger - Photographs London Wednesday, November 7, 2012 | Phillips

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  • Provenance

    Private Collection, London

  • Catalogue Essay

    “During World War II George Rodger was a staff photographer for LIFE Magazine, he covered events in over 50 countries, the names of many one would not recognise today. After the war, he continued travelling – Europe – Far East – Middle East – USA.

    “Time and again his happy hunting ground [for photographs] was Africa. In 1948–1949, George bought a jeep and a trailer and drove across Africa, Cape to Cairo, and it was in a remote area of Southern Sudan that he found his favourite tribe, the
    Nuba of Kordofan. It was very difficult to get to Kordofan then – and it was difficult to return to Kordofan after 1949, although George made many attempts to find his Nuba friends
    again. The area was closed territory for many years after, and although Southern Sudan has gained its status as a country of its own, reaching Kordofan is still a very difficult undertaking.”
    (Jinx Rodger, 2012)

    Titles include: Boys of Wagogo Tribe in Circumcision Ceremony, Tanganyika, Tanzania, 1948; Kordofan, Southern Sudan, 1949; Korongo Nuba, Entering his home, Kordofan, South Sudan, 1949; Bracelet fighter, Kao-Nyaro Nuba, Kordofan, 1949; Kordofan, Southern Sudan, 1949

125

Selected Images

1948-49
Five gelatin silver prints, printed 1985-95.
Varying sizes from 40.3 × 30.5 cm (15 7/8 × 12 in) to 50 × 35.3 cm (19 5/8 × 13 7/8 in)
Each signed by the photographer, variously annotated, dated in an unidentified hand in pencil or ink and four with ‘Magnum Photos’ copyright credit stamps on the verso.

Estimate
£6,000 - 8,000 

Photographs

8 November 2012
London