Saturday 10 April 2021

Gerald Mwale - Visionary Zambian Journalist and Educator

  

By Kerstin Hacker

With deep sadness am I posting this paper I wrote about my collaboration with Gerald Mwale, Lecturer at University of Zambia, who sadly passed away on the 23. February. His enthusiasm and extraordinary vision for photographic education, research and collaboration was unprecedented in Zambia and I will miss his wise council as a colleague and a friend. We had many plans together. Rest in peace, my friend.

 


Over the last twelve years, my colleagues Gerald Mwale and I had been working together to build the foundations for sustainable institutional and artistic collaborations in Zambia and to explore how collaborative artistic networks from the global North and South can challenge the still existing visual narratives and promote visual self-governance through photography. This post charts these collaborative approaches and discusses the broader issues of North/South academic collaborations and why they are often difficult to sustain.

My interest in Zambian photography and photography education started in 2004, when I was working in Zambia as a freelance photographer for an UK NGO. I had worked as a freelance photographer for over a decade and was always keen to work abroad. Many photographers work for NGOs at a reduced rate to enhance their international portfolio. I was one of them. While in Zambia, I started to ask questions on why local photographers were not hired by NGOs and the responses all pointed at lack of visual education opportunities for photographers. With the help of Zambian friends I got in touch with Gerald Mwale, journalism lecturer at the University of Zambia.

Bwire M Musalika highlighted the lack of training facilities for African photojournalists in 1994: “They are mostly not formally trained in the profession and are academically far less educated in comparison with other journalists”. Quarter of a century later the photographic industry is still without any academic foundations and photographers mostly learn through informal and formal mentoring arrangements and focus on the commercial jobs. “Unfortunately our biggest problem we have in Zambia is we don’t really document our visual history and our pioneers in photography.” says photographer Edwin Chibanga. In my interview with him he expresses his worry that there is no incentive to uncover the history of photography in Zambia because of commercial pressures on photographers and he hopes that “formal education in photography might [change] our thinking”.

After initial seed funding from the British Council, Gerald Mwale and I received an Educational Partnerships in Africa Grant in 2009. In the next eighteen months we wrote the curriculum for the BA Photography at UNZA. We developed a curriculum with critical teaching and country-specific contents based on Zambia’s needs identified through academic exchanges, industry roundtables and writing intensives with British and Zambian colleagues. During the curriculum writing process we  had to navigate biases and we had to actively develop our intercultural communication skills and raised our awareness of what it means to decolonialize our collaboration. Stoneman (2013) describes in Global Interchange: The Same but Different the dangers of not being aware inherent biases: “Clearly, the terms of academic activity and judgment deployed in global exchanges are not neutral or objective, but specific and determined. Without conscious or conspiratorial intent, they can reinforce the channels of one-way transmission and influence and efface the way in which Otherness is manufactured, experienced, and understood in the world” . While we were excited to learn from each other to build the curriculum content, we were more naïve about our institutional challenges.


The collaborative curriculum writing became a cultural exchange and an opportunity to learn, network in a creative atmosphere beyond the project scope and helped our institutions to overcome some of their initial mistrust. Together Gerald and I created the foundations for the first BA Photography course in Zambia. At the end of the project, we had buy-in from the University of Zambia and Anglia Ruskin University through a memorandum of understanding, but… we could not secure follow-up funding from UK funders or the Zambian government. Gerald persuaded the UNZA that they had to include photography at least as a component of the Mass Media curriculum and started teaching a photojournalism component in 2010.

In 2017, while waiting for the BA Photography to make its way through the bureaucratic maze, artist Geoffrey Phiri and I organised a photography workshop in collaboration with the Visual Arts Council during my Generation Z exhibition at the Henry Tayeli Gallery in Lusaka. We brought together a group of seven early career artists and photographers for a nine-day workshop discussing Zambian emerging photographic and broader lens based culture. The workshop created a creative social space or Handlungsraum (Moentmann, 2002) in which participants were encouraged to explore a wide range of visual narratives. The decoloniazation of workshop environment was at the forefront of our intentions for this collaboration. Stoneman observed during a North South film making workshop in Marakesh in 1990  that “The expositions from the south relativize an insular and self-perpetuating image system from the north; such discourses may begin as productions of individual self-expression by the filmmaker and can go on to realize a broader social effect as they spread through their audiences.“ Therefore, the workshop was designed to discuss and counteract these self-perpetuating images and activate diverse visual narratives and create an atmosphere in which it was possible to foster empathetic, democratic and reflective peer to peer feedback processes. In Towards an ethnographic turn in contemporary art scholarship, Fiona Siegenthaler (2013) describes this collaborative interaction between artists as “encountering the ‘Other’ as an individual, a colleague, a brother-in-arms, and a person with whom to share ideas, artistic and personal interests, and a social as well as an art-related practice’ (p744). The individual narratives the Zambian photographers chose to explore were encouraging creative self-development and included fashion, documentary and fine art practices. We were dealing with complex themes like cultural heritage, ancestry, conservation and social injustices. The resulting photographs were deliberate localised counter-narratives to the prevailing western stereotypes. The resulting photographs were presented alongside my Generation Z exhibition at the Henry Tayali Gallery at the end of the workshop.


A number of art collaborations have recognised the importance of these learning spaces and organisations like the Nigerian art and photography movement Invisible Borders “recognise the inevitable importance of collaboration in the building of a solid life-long artistic foundation” (2019). Invisible Borders sees itself “at the frontline of an idea that will ensure greater productivity in the contemporary African arts scene”. One of their projects invites photographers, artists and writers on collaborative trans-African road trips documenting everyday life as it presents itself to them as they are passing through. Results of these collaborations were shown at the 2015 Venice Biennale curated by Okwui Enwezor. Enwezor was interested in the interaction between art, art institutions and modernity on the African continent. Speaking at the event Who do you think you are? Culture, identity and the contemporary art museum (2017), Enwezor highlights the responsibility galleries and universities need to take for decolonizing art production in their countries.

In 2019 we therefore returned to Zambia for a second workshop with the Visual Arts Council. The photographic workshop focused on the Kalingalinga township of Lusaka. Narrowing the theme and activity of the workshop came out of discussions with Gerald Mwale and artist Geoffrey Phiri, who had identified the area for its rapid gentrification and societal change. We felt that focusing multiple and diverse visual responses on a specific area would allow us to highlight the diversity of access points and interpretations, which in itself would allow for diverse storytelling and deconstruct the idea of a singular African visual narrative. Ghanaian academic Prosper Tsikata observed, that: “These [African] countries are framing and representing their own stories and experiences, challenging the ‘one-size-fits-all’ assumptions by participating in the creation of media themes by themselves, about themselves and for themselves, with the possibility of influencing how others frame and represent them. This is a clear departure from the past.” (Tsikata, p40)

The township of Kalingalinga exemplifies the rapid modernisation of Lusaka and the economic, social and societal changes that come with that. We invited photographers and visual artists to respond collaboratively to Kalingalinga in a wide range of styles including documentary, still life, fashion and conceptual and fine art practices. The photographers felt enriched and empowered to speak not only about their photographic process and practice but also about social condition they encountered while engaging with Kalingalinga’s microcosm. It highlighted that the arts can be catalyst for a broader debate and “should be tapped for the diverse cultural transformations they can make” (Kabanda, 2018)  

Geoffrey Phiri, who co-organised the workshop at the Zambian National Visual Arts Council summed it up like this: The potential or rather the ability to tell our own stories is very much the essence of the "Stories of Kalingalinga" workshop. These images tell our tale. […] There is definitely no doubt that we are headed in the right direction, we are building a network that will be active long after the workshop. […] My hope is that other institutions will come on board and thus the visual stories of Kalingalinga and Zambia will continue to develop.”

Results from the collaboration were exhibited in January 2020 in the Ruskin Gallery in Cambridge, are now hanging in the Centre of African Studies at Cambridge University and will go on a touring exhibition through Zambia in 2022.

In 2020 the University of Zambia re-structured the Mass Communication Department into a larger School of Mass Communication and the BA Photography curriculum, that Gerald and I had written together, was one of the first ones that was approved by the University senate. Gerald had worked tirelessly behind the scenes to make this happen. He will be greatly missed as an advocate for photography, journalism and the arts in Zambia.