Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
Kristin-Lee Moolman's powerful portraits have been making waves in the fashion and photography worlds. The South African showcases creativity and beauty in Africa, and counters the negative stereotypes about her home country. This photo of Nigerian model Kemi Kayode, wearing Bottega Veneta, was taken for the 2019 fall/winter issue of arts and culture magazine Document Journal.

Scroll through the gallery to see more of Moolman's photography.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
For the same shoot, Moolman worked with non-binary DJ and model Caleb Nkosi (pictured). Moolman wants to showcase more diversity in Africa, particularly the LGBTQ+ community.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
Moolman's dreamy, washed-out esthetic -- seen in this 2017 photo, "Three copper pennies" -- has gained her international recognition. In 2020, Moolman won the Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers, which celebrates under-recognized artists.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
Moolman says that for many years, she worked on generic commercial fashion shoots. But by embracing her South African identity and connecting with her roots, Moolman has developed a unique photography style that she says feels more authentic.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
In 2020, Moolman took part in a virtual photography show, "28 Hats for Lamu." The photos, featuring eccentric headpieces, celebrate the transformative power of creativity.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
The headpieces were designed as part of the the biannual Shela Hat Contest held on the island of Lamu, Kenya. Moolman worked alongside stylist Louise Ford for the show.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
Made from recycled materials, the hats were part of a Lamu initiative to clean up and reconnect with the environment.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
The 28 Hats for Lamu project raises funds for The New Leaf Drug Rehabilitation Center in Lamu, with 95% of photography sales donated to the center. Photos were set against the backdrop of Lamu's beaches
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
One of Moolman's goals is to highlight under-represented communities in her work. She took this portrait of "Johnny Wonderful" while photographing members of the queer community in Kinshasa, in Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
Moolman worked with Belgian-Congolese rapper Baloji on his nine-minute music video "Peau de Chagrin/Bleu de Nuit." This photo, entitled "A family portrait" is a still from the shoot.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
Peau de Chagrin/Bleu de Nuit was shot in Lusanga in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where this still, "Mami Wata," is also from.
Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
Going forward, Moolman hopes to work on more on projects that elevate women. She's also working more with video, and looks forward to experimenting with filmmaking.
CNN  — 

South African photographer Kristin-Lee Moolman has gained international recognition for her powerful portraits against surreal, bleached-out landscapes.

In 2020, she won the Rudin Prize for Emerging Photographers, and has worked with big names including Rihanna in a shoot for New York Times Style Magazine, and fashion houses including Dior and Burberry.

But her fashion shoots are about more than sleek silhouettes and couture design. Moolman is using her platform to challenge negative media portrayals of South Africa – and counter the stereotypes perpetuated about her home country.

‘Homecoming’

Moolman was born into a White Afrikaans family and grew up during the final years of apartheid, a system of legislated racial segregation in South Africa. Apartheid ended in the early 1990s when Nelson Mandela became the country’s first Black president, after fighting against oppression for half a century. The political turmoil in South Africa had a profound effect on Moolman, and her sense of identity.

“I felt so much guilt by association of what my people did to other people,” she said. “For a long time, I wanted to get away from being Afrikaans, being White, being South African.”

Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
In 2020, Moolman took part in a virtual photography show, "28 Hats for Lamu." The photos, featuring eccentric headpieces, celebrate the transformative power of creativity.

Moolman began traveling abroad in the mid-2000s, working on commercial fashion shoots and advertising campaigns. “It was work that emulated what I thought people wanted. There was no soul there,” she said. “I reached the conclusion that I couldn’t make work that I didn’t identify with.”

This wasn’t an overnight revelation, she said, but one that took years: a lengthy mental and emotional “homecoming” as Moolman changed her perspective on what it meant to be South African.

While Moolman describes her lifestyle as “nomadic” – before returning to South Africa for the duration of the pandemic, she was based in Thailand for several months and used to fly frequently around the world for shoots – she now feels at home in South Africa. The landscapes of her work are free of perspective lines, showing yawning desert dunes and stretches of endless sky, reflecting the small towns she grew up in. “Everything coalesced when I made this mental and physical move to be at home,” she said.

Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
Moolman shot non-binary DJ and model Caleb Nkosi for arts and culture magazine Document Journal.

Creating a counter-narrative

Part of Moolman’s struggle with her nationality was a product of what she says was a predominantly negative portrayal of South Africa in the media.

The prevalence of stories about poverty, violence, and lack of education in South Africa struck a nerve for Moolman – while she acknowledges these problems exist, she is frustrated that so much of her country’s “creativity and joy” is overlooked.

“There’s this strength of character that people don’t show,” she said, a key part of the counter-narrative her work tries to highlight. Staring directly into the camera, Moolman’s diverse subjects are powerful and sculptural against a dreamy, washed-out pastel landscape. This direct gaze helps to neutralize the “predatory voyeurism” inherent in photography, she said.

Courtesy Kristin-Lee Moolman
This is a still from the shoot for "Peau de Chagrin/Bleu de Nuit," a music video filmed with Belgian-Congolese rapper Baloji.

Showcasing strong women

In recent years, Moolman says she is focused more on women and showcasing diversity. One of the trigger moments for this focus was Moolman’s 2019 shoot with Rihanna, for the superstar’s Fenty line. “Rihanna was one of the first ones (shoots) where I realized, you know what? Women are powerful.”

“I have a tremendous amount of respect for Rihanna, because of her voice in terms of diversity, women, sexuality. I really like her ideology and her view on the world, so to be able to work with her was really cool,” Moolman said.

One of Moolman’s latest women-focused projects is “Banyoloyi A Bosigo” (“Ultimate Midnite Angels”). The short film showcases the Autumn/Winter 2021 collection of Moolman’s frequent collaborator, South African fashion designer Thebe Magugu, and premiered virtually at Paris Fashion Week in March.

The 12-minute film, shot and written by Moolman, features an all-female cast in a story infused with African spirituality and queer characters. Moolman, who identifies as queer, is determined to highlight this often-overlooked part of South African identity.

01:49 - Source: CNN
The African photographers pushing visual boundaries

The film also marks Moolman’s move towards filmmaking, an area that she’s been exploring over the last few years. Using film to go deeper into women’s stories, Moolman wants to go beyond the movie trope of female characters having to survive trauma such as rape or assault to be considered strong. “There’s always a condition, a reason they became powerful,” she said of the cinematic convention. “It’s never shown that they’re powerful to begin with.”

As the medium for her creativity changes, Moolman says honesty is the most important aspect of her work. “You will never stop evolving, because everything you experience, you assimilate into what you do. So I think my work will continue to change and especially moving into filmmaking more, it’s just a whole new world of things to explore.”