Simon Norfolk
Radio Afghanistan’s new transmitters paid for by American money; broadcasting official government news and anti-Taliban security alerts.

Radio Afghanistan’s new transmitters paid for by American money; broadcasting official government news and anti-Taliban security alerts.

© Simon Norfolk / Gallery Luisotti

Radio Afghanistan’s new transmitters paid for by American money; broadcasting official government news and anti-Taliban security alerts.
Radio Afghanistan’s new transmitters paid for by American money; broadcasting official government news and anti-Taliban security alerts.
ArtistBritish, born Nigeria, 1963
CultureBritish
Titles
  • Radio Afghanistan’s new transmitters paid for by American money; broadcasting official government news and anti-Taliban security alerts.
  • from the portfolio Burke + Norfolk: Photographs from the War in Afghanistan
Date2010–2011, printed September 2011
Place depictedKabul, Afghanistan
MediumChromogenic print
DimensionsImage: 14 3/8 × 19 1/8 in. (36.5 × 48.6 cm)
Sheet: 15 × 20 in. (38.1 × 50.8 cm)
Credit LineGift of Morris Weiner
Object number2016.224.39
Non exposé

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Department
Photography
Object Type
ProvenanceThe artist; [Gallery Luisotti, Santa Monica, California]; purchased by Morris Weiner, Houston, 2012; given to MFAH, 2016.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
Stamped in black ink, verso, lower right: Burke + Norfolk // Photographs from the war in Afghanistan // by John Burke and Simon Norfolk // Printed by Simon Norfolk, September 2011 // An archival, digital, chromogenic print on Fujicolor Crystal Archive // Photograph by Simon Norfolk [signed in pencil over a stamped underline] // One of 104 prints in a Burke + Norfolk portfolio special edition // Edition number 1 of eight [1 is handwritten in pencil over a stamped underline]
Norfolk prints are signed and numbered on verso lower right, within artist's stamp

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

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Security lights and communications antennae at Camp Leatherneck.
Simon Norfolk
2010–2011, printed September 2011
Chromogenic print
2016.224.88
A security guard’s booth at the newly restored Ikhtyaruddin citadel, Herat.
Simon Norfolk
2010–2011, printed September 2011
Chromogenic print
2016.224.29
Strongly pro-Taliban refugees. For the photograph, they chose to partially cover their faces.
Simon Norfolk
2010–2011, printed September 2011
Chromogenic print
2016.224.68