| Kathleen
Patricia Thrane
Kathleen
Patricia Thrane is a painter, documentary-photographer, avocational
archaeologist, and activist. Born in New York City in 1962 to Scottish
and Norwegian parents, she grew up between Connecticut and Norway.
She studied at the New School for Social Research/Parsons School
of Design and Norwalk Community College.
Thrane has lived in Europe, the Far East, and Africa and is fluent
in several languages. She worked in the Philippines during the Marcos/Aquino
revolution. Her activism against apartheid included working with
Dali Tambo, the son of African National Congress president Oliver
Tambo and the founder of Artists Against Apartheid, in London during
the 1980's.
In 1985-6, Thrane worked and lived in the townships of apartheid
South Africa, using her skills as a photographer to document poverty
and discrimination. Her work was difficult and dangerous. She entered
South Africa in the guise of a fashion photographer and had to work
in secret. Thrane was jailed while trying to photograph migrant
labor camps. Although she was able to hand over her camera to a
colleague before she was arrested, she was still carrying seven
rolls of film. Fortunately, they were not discovered, and those
films became the only ones she was eventually able to bring out
of the country. She also met with resistance to publicizing her
work outside South Africa, owing to the sanctions that were then
in place.
In addition to her photography and painting, Thrane worked with
Jonas Gwangwa as he developed the sound track for the movie Cry
Freedom; and she worked on concerts sponsored by Artists Against
Apartheid, including the “Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute”
in 1988, part of the campaign for Mandela’s release from prison.
She is currently researching and writing a book on domestic violence,
and is active in local environmental issues and archaeological and
historic preservation.
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