Stanley Wolukau-Wanambwa (born 1980)[1] is a Ugandan-born[2] British photographer, writer, and educator, living in the USA.[3] His series One Wall a Web has been shown in a solo exhibition at Light Work in New York and the book of the work won the Paris Photo-Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Award's First PhotoBook Award.[4][5]
The book One Wall a Web (2018) includes two photographic series made by Wolukau-Wanambwa in the USA—Our Present Invention (2012–2014) and All My Gone Life (2014–2017)—as well as an extensive essay and appropriated archival images.[3][10] It "draws together poetry, critical writing, and photography to reflect on the ways that race, gender, and violence are woven into the fabric of (white) Western modernity. Set in America – with its history of injustice and its troubled present – One Wall a Web asks how documentary photography both participates in this complex play of forces, and suggests ways that we might find alternative pathways through it."[11]
Publications
Books by Wolukau-Wanambwa
One Wall A Web. Amsterdam: Roma, 2018. ISBN978-9492811226. Photographs and an essay by Wolukau-Wanambwa as well as appropriated archival images.[3][10]
Hiding in Plain Sight. Harun Farocki Institute; Motto, 2020. Co-authored with Ben Alper. ISBN978-2940672073.
The Lives of Images, Vol. 1: Repetition, Reproduction, and Circulation. Aperture Reader Series. New York: Aperture, 2021. Edited by Wolukau-Wanambwa. ISBN9781597115025.