Black and White Photography by Sebastião Salgado
Sebastião Salgado is a Brazilian social documentary
photographer and photojournalist. Salgado was born on February 8, 1944
in Aimorés, in the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil. After a somewhat
itinerant childhood, Salgado initially trained as an economist, earning a
master’s degree in economics from the University of São Paulo in
Brazil. He began work as an economist for the International Coffee
Organization, often traveling to Africa on missions for the World Bank,
when he first started seriously taking photographs. He chose to abandon a
career as an economist and switched to photography in 1973, working
initially on news assignments before veering more towards
documentary-type work. Salgado initially worked with the photo agency
Sygma and the Paris-based Gamma, but in 1979, he joined the
international cooperative of photographers Magnum Photos. He left Magnum
in 1994 and with his wife Lélia Wanick Salgado formed his own agency,
Amazonas Images, in Paris, to represent his work. He is particularly
noted for his social documentary photography of workers in less
developed nations. They reside in Paris.
He has traveled in over 100 countries for his photographic projects.
Most of these, besides appearing in numerous press publications, have
also been presented in books such as Other Americas (1986), Sahel:
l’homme en détresse (1986), Sahel: el fin del camino (1988), Workers
(1993), Terra (1997), Migrations and Portraits (2000), and Africa
(2007). Touring exhibitions of this work have been, and continue to be,
presented throughout the world. Longtime gallery director Hal Gould
considers Salgado to be the most important photographer of the early
21st century,[citation needed] and gave him his first show in the United
States.