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South African artist William Kentridge on his Beijing retrospective

The artist tells Payal Uttam his work has always married the political and the personal

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South African artist William Kentridge on his Beijing retrospective

South African artist William Kentridge was six when he stumbled across a box in his father's study in Johannesburg. What he discovered was to have a big impact on his life.

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"I was ... expecting it to be a box of chocolates, but inside were photographs of people who had been shot dead," he recalls.

The images were from a police massacre in Sharpeville in 1960. His father was an anti-apartheid lawyer defending the victims' families.

"I was shocked. It was like coming across pornography, both fascinating and impossible to look at," says Kentridge, now 60. "That was a brutal understanding that the world is a dangerous, difficult place."

The incident would remain in his mind, and decades later, gut-wrenching images of corpses like those he saw as a child would resurface in his raw charcoal drawings.

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