Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed
Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed

Pang’Ono Pang’Ono - signed

Regular price
not available
Sale price
€59,00

Self Published Edition of 500 | Signed & Numbered | Photography: Laura El-Tantawy | Design: SYB | Production: Jos Morree Fine Books | Lithography, Printing & Binding: Wilco Art Books | Released March 2023 | 
SPECIFICATIONS
Dimensions: 28.8 x 19cm
105 Photographs
Hard Cover | Half Linen with Transparent Foil Emboss
Weight: 600 grams
Normal Pages: 220 x 280mm
Shorter Photo Pages: 180 x 280mm
Shorter Text Pages: 140 x 280mm
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Pang’Ono Pang’Ono explores the emotional and physical toll on women in Malawi in their quest to access clean water. The title — Pang’Ono Pang’Ono or little by little — is borrowed from a colloquial Chichewa expression referencing time and urging patience — used here to metaphorically reflect on the sentiment around water. With a population of nearly 21 million people, Malawi is one of the smallest and least-developed countries in Africa. Although the country has an abundance of water — with around 24,404 square kilometres flowing through its fertile land, including Lake Malawi, the third-largest freshwater lake on the continent — providing clean water to every single citizen is a national problem. One in three people live without it. Considered a domestic chore, the responsibility of securing water falls predominantly on the shoulders of women. The series was produced over a period of 10 days working on commission with WaterAid in Malawi.
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“Water is something I wake up everyday worrying about. I have so many worries — it’s like I have nowhere to run to.”

— Delia Laiford, 56 | Grandmother