
Photography as Salvation: Zanele Muholi’s Journey from Pain to Purpose
When Zanele Muholi picks up a camera, she isn’t just taking a photo, she is reclaiming a story, a history, and a life. The South African visual artist, internationally celebrated for her bold black-and-white portraits of LGBTQ+ communities, credits photography with saving her from the brink of suicide.
Born in KwaZulu-Natal and moving to Johannesburg at 19, Muholi faced a series of personal crises before finding refuge at the Market Photo Workshop, the Johannesburg school where she honed her craft under the mentorship of documentary photography legend David Goldblatt. “I was on the verge of suicide,” Muholi recalls. “Someone told me it was either therapy or find something creative. Photography became my therapy.”
From Personal Lens to Global Impact
Muholi’s work is raw, intimate, and unapologetically political. Her portraits often focus on black LGBTQ+ individuals, spotlighting the very real threats of homophobia and gender-based violence in South Africa. Some of her bronze sculptures have even reached France’s Jardin des Tuileries, displayed at Art Basel Paris in 2023.
Beyond documenting marginalized communities, Muholi is branching into broader societal themes like water and power, though she stresses, “Women, children, queer and trans people will always be dear to me.” Her approach is deeply rooted in South Africa’s unique landscape: the country legalized same-sex marriage and enshrined sexual orientation as a constitutional right, yet it still grapples with extreme inequality and high rates of gender-based violence.
Triumph Through Trauma
Muholi’s recent hospitalisation in Panama, after an accident on a photo shoot—was a stark reminder of life’s fragility. “It was a wake-up call to say that moving too fast could become something else,” she told reporters at the Black Women in Photography Conference in Johannesburg, where she returned to inspire the next generation of artists.
This mission is at the heart of Muholi’s work: mentoring others to tell their own stories. Through the Muholi Art Institute, launched in 2021, she trains young African artists to document their realities, reclaiming narratives often distorted by outsiders. “The whole point is to articulate our issues loudly and proudly, without fear of how outsiders perceive us,” she says.
Rewriting the Story of Africa
Muholi’s lens doesn’t just capture struggle, it reveals beauty, resilience, and dignity. “People look at Africa as primitive or broken, but a lot has been stolen from us. It’s time we recognize our worth. Africa is the richest continent,” she emphasizes.
Her story is a testament to the transformative power of art, proving that photography is more than an image, it can be a lifeline, a voice, and a movement.
{Source: IOL}
Featured Image: X{@humanite_fr}