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by Daniel Naude
For the past two years Naudé has focused on photographing cattle in societies
where these animals are revered and venerated. This is a position far removed from
the Western world where they are mostly seen as productive sources of milk, meat
and skins. Naudé first photographed the Ankole cattle in Uganda, renowned for their
majestic horns which ideally curve out and then inward, forming a shape like a lyre.
In the days before Christianity arrived in this part of Africa, the Bahima people made
offerings of milk to herdsman gods, and their language has many names for cattle
that describe their characteristics. Even now, the keepers of these animals live
pastoral lives, their culture deeply rooted in these cattle. The survival of the Ankole is
at the heart of cultural and economic debates about indigenous African values and
symbolism versus a Western emphasis on commercial concerns.
In Madagascar, the distinctive Zebu cattle form part of the Bara people's cosmology
and ancestor worship. There are distinctive Zebu selected for sacrificial purposes, such as those with a black head and
white diamond shape on the forehead. In these societies, on the day of the death of a cattle owner, all his cattle are
slaughtered and the skulls are placed on his tomb, along with funeral posts decorated with motifs describing the person's
life.
In India, the Brahmin culture sees cows, along with all other life forms, as manifestations of god; as Gandhi said, 'I worship
it and I shall defend its worship against the whole world.' For Hindu people, Nandi the bull is the mount of the god
Shiva, and gatekeeper of Shiva's abode, and as such is found as a motif in temples throughout India. In southern India,
where Naudé took his portraits, a harvest and cattle festival known as Mattu Pongal celebrates their divinity and they are
accordingly richly decorated. The deep respect for cows and bulls in India is exemplified by the fact that in some states
the slaughter of cattle is allowed only with many restrictions around the age and gender of cattle, and it is completely
banned in six states.
In his portraits of cattle, Naudé brings into our time the long tradition of depicting the natural world with its rich
references to classification and comparison. In many respects, this tradition faded in the 20th century because there
were very few lands and creatures left to classify as the world had been mapped and the animals of the world named.
The heightened presence of the animals in his images allows us to experience the awe and wonder that accompanied the
reception of images and reports of exotic animals when they reached Europe in previous centuries. Yet, those images
were invariably composites; drawings brought together elements that were unlikely in reality to be seen in the same
frame. In our present day, the wide use of Photoshop continues the use of multiple images to create a single, often
unusual image. In Naudé's case however, within a single photographic frame, he inexplicably captures a strong
presence of the animal, usually in a sculptural pose, set within an apt descriptive landscape, and lit naturally, despite
having very little control over all these elements. Thus the images seemingly defy reality and heighten the sacred status
of the cattle. When seeing them for the first time, after an initial wonderment at the animal's presence, the mind
grapples with the understated improbability of the image and is compelled to look again and again for clues to its
composition.