Category Archives: educator at Aurora Girls High School

2014 Oct. 22: Paris meets Aurora Young Female Photographers

by Thobe Gumede It is Tuesday, 21st Oct. 2014 in the afternoon at Aurora GHS where guest speakers come and share expertise with young photographers. The interaction started with a traditional icebreaker, a good meal, brought by the visitor for … Continue reading

Posted in 2012 Paris Pride, Another Approach Is Possible, Archived memories, Art Is A Human Right, Art is Queer, Art Solidarity, Articles, Articulation, Artist Talk, Arts & Culture, Arts & Sports, As we are, Attention, Audience, “Foot for Love", Beautiful faces, Beautiful people, Before US, Before You, Being conscientized, Blackness, Captioned, Captured, Career, Caring citizens, Caring for our female youth, Celebrating Women, Celebration, Characters, Citizenship, Comment, Comments from the audience, Commitment, Community based media, Community education, Community outreach, Community work, Connected souls, Connections, Consideration, Creating awareness, Description, Details, Different positions, Documentary screening, Documentation; Filming; Photography; Community, Documenting our own lives, Documenting realities of the townships, Education, educator at Aurora Girls High School, Emotional support, Empowerment, Equipe Les Degommeuses, From Paris to Soweto, Introductions, Reviving the culture of reading and writing, revolution, Sharing, soccer player, Social responsibility, Solidarity, South Africa, South African townships, South African visual history through the eyes of young women, Speaking for ourselves, Support, Supporters, Supporting each other, Teaching young women photography, Testimonies from Aurora photographers, Textualizing Our Own Lives, Thobe Gumede, Time, together, Together we can, Veronica Noseda, Videographer, Visibility, Vision, Visual activism, Visual activism is a language, Visual democracy, Visual historical initiative, Visual history, Visual history is a Right not a luxury, Visual Language, Visual Power, Visual Voices, We Are You, We Care, We Love Photography, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here, Women's power, Women's Work, Women; Voices; Writings; Education; Traditions; Struggles; Cultures, Writing is a Right, Young Black Women and Photography, Young female photographers from Aurora, Youth voices | 1 Comment

2014 Oct. 2: Long trip to Cape Town from Johannesburg

Photo album by Nonhlanhla Maluleka (17) from Aurora Girls High – 2014 Photo XP young female photographers…   Passing De Doorns informal settlements on way to Cape Town       De Doorns II   Breasted mountains of the Western … Continue reading

Posted in 2014 Cape Town Fringe, 2014 Oct. 2 Cape Times article, 2014 Photo XP, Cape Town, Conference, Consideration, educator at Aurora Girls High School, Experience, Expertise, Exploration, Exposure, Expression, Facilitation, Facilitators, Facing You, Family, Feelings, Female being, Income generation, Independence, Inkanyiso media, Interpretation, Invisibility, Mainstream media, More than 67 mins, Nonhlanhla Maluleka, Power of the Arts, Power of the Voice, Presentations, Professionals, Questioning, Questions & Answers, Readers, Readings, Reason, ReClaim Your Activism, Recognition, Reflection, Relationships, relative, Remembering, Reports, Respect, Respected person, Reviving the culture of reading and writing, revolution, SA mainstream media, Seeing difference, Self love, Sharing knowledge, Sharing thoughts, Social responsibility, Society, South Africa, South African art, South African struggle, South African townships, South African Visual Activism, South African visual history through the eyes of young women, South African Youth, Speaking for ourselves, State of Art, Struggling activist, Students, Studying, Style, Stylish, Subject of Art, Support, Survivor, Teaching, Teaching young women photography, Testimonies from Aurora photographers, The Castle, Together we can, Togetherness, Translation, Transparency, Victim of hate crime, Videography, Visibility, Vision, Visual activism, Visual activism is a language, Visual Activist, Visual Activist in the classroom, Visual Arts, Visual democracy, Visual diaries, Visual history, Visual history is a Right not a luxury, Visual Language, Visual narratives, Visual Power, Visual sense, Visual Voices, Visualizing public spaces, We Care, We love photographs, We Love Photography, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here | 4 Comments