Ismaiel Isaacs
South African photographer Ismaiel Isaacs, 31, grew up in Manenberg, in the Cape Flats area of Cape Town. His photos, like this one of a corner store, depict the other side of life in one of the world's most beautiful cities.
Ismaiel Isaacs
Isaacs describes his photography aesthetic as raw, unfiltered and emotive.
Ismaiel Isaacs
The Cape Flats area has a reputation for being one of the most dangerous parts of Cape Town. But it is also a place of great character, community and culture, Isaacs says. "The present moment is actually all you have, for worrying takes you out of the present and into the future, which you cannot control anyway," he wrote on Instagram when he posted this portrait.
Ismaiel Isaacs
"I try and convey a message of the beauty that's in the struggle," Issacs tells CNN. "[It's] not only the struggles that we go through that make us stronger people, but people that live here -- they are beautiful."
Ismaiel Isaacs
The Cape Flats are a flat, sandy urban sprawl on the outskirts of Cape Town's city center. Beginning in the early 1950s, under South Africa's apartheid government, people of color were forcibly relocated there earning it the reputation of "apartheid's dumping ground."
Ismaiel Isaacs
"You're unique in your own way, just like Armpie in the picture," Isaacs wrote on Instragram with this picture. "Keep smiling."
Barry Christianson
Photographer Barry Christianson, 38, also grew up in the same area. His photos often focus on spaces and the people who occupy them -- like this picture from Cape Town's Bo-kaap neighborhood. "Many of its poorer residents are battling to hold onto their homes due to the effects of gentrification," Christianson wrote on Instragram.
Barry Christianson
"Cape Town is a fundamentally fractured city, as divided as it is beautiful," Christianson tells CNN. "There are multiple cities existing side by side -- some for the haves and others for the have-nots."
Barry Christianson
Christianson captured this photo of boys from Manzomthombo Secondary School, during the 2019 global climate strike in Cape Town.
Barry Christianson
South Africa endured a strict lockdown that began in late March, and only recently began to ease. Here, Christianson shows the first patient sitting in consultation with healthcare workers, "before being tested for Covid-19 at the Schotschekloof Civic Center. This was the first community run screening and testing in Bo-kaap."
Barry Christianson
For as long as he can remember, social and geographic disparity have impacted the way Christianson has viewed the city he calls home. "Lulamile Paleso warms himself at a fire where his shack used to stand," he wrote as the caption for this photo. "He could no longer afford to pay rent as a backyarder, so moved his shack to Empolweni."
Barry Christianson
"[Cape Town is a] city that keeps moving people around, a very specific group of people around, who are never really allowed to stay in one place permanently," he says. The legacy of forced removals remains a deeply sensitive and difficult issue in South Africa today, which has had the most profound effect on non-white communities.
Barry Christianson
"Even though I photograph space," Christianson says, "I try to bring out personal stories and personal histories, and how people relate to Cape Town." This photo shows a young boy standing at the door of his grandmother's home that was built in 1863. Christianson wrote that when the grandmother was asked if she would ever consider selling, she replied: "Never. When I die, I want to be carried out of this house to my grave."
Cape Town, South Africa CNN  — 

When you think of Cape Town, what do you imagine? Perhaps you picture Table Mountain, penguins on the sand, or the stunning beaches that surround this city.

Cape Town is often considered one of the most Instagrammable cities in the world. For the past seven years, it has been voted the top tourist city in the world by the Telegraph Travel Awards.

But beyond the picture-perfect version of the city, a different, more complex reality exists – set against the backdrop of the world’s most unequal country.

Here we meet two of the photographers working to revealing a deeper, grittier and less publicized side of the city through their images.

Ismaiel Isaacs, the portrait photographer of the Cape Flats

Ismaiel Isaacs, 31, grew up in Manenberg, in the Cape Flats – a flat, sandy urban sprawl on the outskirts of Cape Town’s city center. Beginning in the early 1950s, under South Africa’s apartheid government, people of color were forcibly relocated there earning it the reputation of “apartheid’s dumping ground.”

Today, it is home to over a million people, most of whom are of mixed heritage.

03:08 - Source: CNN
These photographers are showing a different side of Cape Town

Even after 26 years of democracy, it remains a notorious part of Cape Town, socio-economically marginalized from the city center and surrounding suburbs.

As Isaacs tells CNN, living here is a struggle; on a daily basis, people face gang violence, poverty and the risk of death due to ongoing drug wars.

But it is also a place of great character, community and culture – and that is where Isaacs draws his inspiration.

Courtesy Ismaiel Isaacs
Ismaiel Isaacs, photographer

“I try and convey a message of the beauty that’s in the struggle,” Issacs says. “[It’s] not only the struggles that we go through that make us stronger people, but people that live here – they are beautiful.”

His photographs focus mostly on portraits of people from these communities. He describes his aesthetic as raw, unfiltered and emotive.

“My story of Cape Town in my photography is the story of not just mountains and beaches, but there’s also an unpolished side of Cape Town that has been forgotten about,” he says. “And I feel that there’s a need for us to recognize it, because there’s a lot happening here. And actually, in the Cape Flats, we need support.”

Isaacs also says that he uplifts people through taking their photos.

“I’m trying to take the negatives and bring it into a positive, because as soon as I pick up my camera and ask someone, ‘Look, here, can I take a picture of you?’ What are they going to do? They’re going to smile,” he says.

“For that moment, I’m making them smile and that’s fulfilling enough for me.”

Barry Christianson, the documentary photographer

Barry Christianson, 38, grew up straddling two different worlds: during the week, he lived with his mom in the Cape Flats, while his weekends were spent with his dad in the middle-class suburbs of Cape Town.

“Cape Town is a fundamentally fractured city, as divided as it is beautiful,” Christianson says. “There are multiple cities existing side by side – some for the haves and others for the have-nots.”

For as long as he can remember, social and geographic disparity have impacted the way he has viewed the city he calls home. After spending 16 years as a computer programmer, he felt compelled to turn his photography hobby into a full-time job.

Courtesy Barry Christianson
Barry Christianson, documentary photographer

“From colonialism through apartheid to democracy, people of color have been dispossessed of land, livelihood and freedom of movement,” Christianson says.

“Having to navigate the two realities and all that came along with them made me acutely aware of spaces I inhabited,” he explains. “A lot of my photography deals with issues around space and how space is created, who’s in the space, who creates it and what happens to the space when different people occupy it.”

He brought CNN along for a tour of locations he’s captured that illustrate these themes – like Saunders’ Rocks, a former Whites-only beach. Today, Christianson believes it is one of the most racially integrated beaches in the city.

He took one of his favorite photos at this spot – a Muslim woman wearing a burkini, something he says you might not see in other parts of the city.

A lot of his work also focuses on people who have faced more recent eviction, especially in areas of inner-city gentrification.

“As developers buy and sell valuable properties in the city center, black and mixed-race South Africans who managed to stay in the inner city throughout the apartheid era are being evicted and forced into low-quality housing on the city’s outskirts”, Christianson says

“[Cape Town is a] city that keeps moving people around, a very specific group of people around, who are never really allowed to stay in one place permanently,” he added.

That legacy of forced removals remains a deeply sensitive and difficult issue in South Africa today, which has had the most profound effect on non-white communities.

He often pairs essays with his images and is one of a handful of documentarians committed to bringing these stories and the people behind them to light.

“Even though I photograph space,” he says, “I try to sort of bring out personal stories and personal histories, and how people relate to Cape Town.”

The story has been updated to correct the age and spelling of Ismaiel Isaacs.