David Goldblatt
Sant Cosme Housing Estate, El Prat del Llobregat. Sèrie: "Connexions globals"
Sant Cosme Housing Estate, El Prat del Llobregat. Sèrie: "Connexions globals"
2007
Several works in the series Global Connections of David Goldblatt include a short explanatory text in the label. The text for this image is:
"Most of the people living in Sant Cosme were relocated from shantytowns in Montjuïc and Camp de la Bota during the 1970s. The neighborhood underwent substantial renovations in the 1990s. I found it strange that in an otherwise carefully planned development the new metro station under construction at right, and the extensions to the Damm Brewery in the background, should be permitted in such extreme proximity to these apartments."
David Goldblatt
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As part of a photographic study on Barcelona that was carried out during 2007 and 2008, in which MACBA commissioned new work from several renowned photographers, David Goldblatt focused specifically on the area of the Llobregat river, with its many road networks, industrial estates, and the airport site. The result is a set of photographs entitled Global Connections, which was part of the group show Metropolitan Images of the New Barcelona, within the exhibition Universal Archive. The Condition of the Document and the Modern Photographic Utopia at MACBA in 2008. Along with David Goldblatt, photographers such as Ahlam Shibli, Marc Pataut and Allan Sekula documented various aspects of changing relationships between the economy, forms of labour and social networks in Barcelona, as part of this initiative of the MACBA Independent Studies Program (PEI).
Goldblatt’s photographs show the control tower and the construction of the new terminal at the airport, the nearby Logistic Activities Zone (ZAL), and the construction work on the new high speed train (Barcelona-Madrid TGV) and on the southern breakwater at the city’s port. Goldblatt documents the industrial and communications infrastructures, but also the human habits that coexist in these contexts of urban transformation: agricultural workers at El Prat who trade their products at Mercabarna, Barcelona’s central market; La Ricarda beach and the Sant Cosme neighbourhood; European truck drivers in the industrial estates at the ZAL; people watching planes fly in at the Mirador del Prat; the queues waiting to take a taxi at the port cruise terminal; prostitution on the motorway from Castelldefels to Gavà; window cleaners at Hotel Hesperia in l’Hospitalet; and the falconers who help to drive off the birds in the airport area.
As in his many of his previous works, Goldblatt shows human interventions in the landscape, architectural structures and constructions, but also the political decisions and ideological frameworks that bring them into existence.
"Most of the people living in Sant Cosme were relocated from shantytowns in Montjuïc and Camp de la Bota during the 1970s. The neighborhood underwent substantial renovations in the 1990s. I found it strange that in an otherwise carefully planned development the new metro station under construction at right, and the extensions to the Damm Brewery in the background, should be permitted in such extreme proximity to these apartments."
David Goldblatt
_
As part of a photographic study on Barcelona that was carried out during 2007 and 2008, in which MACBA commissioned new work from several renowned photographers, David Goldblatt focused specifically on the area of the Llobregat river, with its many road networks, industrial estates, and the airport site. The result is a set of photographs entitled Global Connections, which was part of the group show Metropolitan Images of the New Barcelona, within the exhibition Universal Archive. The Condition of the Document and the Modern Photographic Utopia at MACBA in 2008. Along with David Goldblatt, photographers such as Ahlam Shibli, Marc Pataut and Allan Sekula documented various aspects of changing relationships between the economy, forms of labour and social networks in Barcelona, as part of this initiative of the MACBA Independent Studies Program (PEI).
Goldblatt’s photographs show the control tower and the construction of the new terminal at the airport, the nearby Logistic Activities Zone (ZAL), and the construction work on the new high speed train (Barcelona-Madrid TGV) and on the southern breakwater at the city’s port. Goldblatt documents the industrial and communications infrastructures, but also the human habits that coexist in these contexts of urban transformation: agricultural workers at El Prat who trade their products at Mercabarna, Barcelona’s central market; La Ricarda beach and the Sant Cosme neighbourhood; European truck drivers in the industrial estates at the ZAL; people watching planes fly in at the Mirador del Prat; the queues waiting to take a taxi at the port cruise terminal; prostitution on the motorway from Castelldefels to Gavà; window cleaners at Hotel Hesperia in l’Hospitalet; and the falconers who help to drive off the birds in the airport area.
As in his many of his previous works, Goldblatt shows human interventions in the landscape, architectural structures and constructions, but also the political decisions and ideological frameworks that bring them into existence.
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If you want to make a work loan request, go to colleccio@macba.cat.
If you want the image of the work in high resolution, you can send an image loan request.