This book entitled Cry Sadness into the Coming Rain is Margaret Courtney-Clarke’s visual ode to her home country, Namibia, and describes the bare circumstances of ordinary Namibians, of women and men forced to negotiate ravaged lives. Returning to Namibia in 2009 after decades of living abroad, Courtney-Clarke encountered a changed country in the throes of unrestrained development, the Namib Desert desecrated, and peoples migrating from rural settlements to towns in search of a better life. “With strong memories of my formative years growing up on the edge of the Namib Desert,” she recalls, “I have returned to explore my obsession with this place and my lifelong curiosity for the notion of shelter.”
These photos are the result of Courtney-Clarke’s travels over 30,000 kilometers across dusty plains, sand dunes and salt pans, through conservancies, homelands and forgotten outposts. They evidence her passionate concern for human enterprise and failure, and for an inhospitable environment infused with remnants of apartheid as well as hope. “Like a pulse in the background her involvement throbs with love and anger,” also writes South-African photographer David Goldblatt in a foreword to the book. “Anger at the stunting of lives, the blunting of hope, the desecration of the Namib and her own frailty, when there is so much to tell, not the least of which is love.”
Margaret Courtney-Clarke, Cry Sadness into the Coming Rain
Published by Steidl
€ 75.00