We are taking a break from 20 till 29 of December, all orders made in that period will ship after the 29 of December. thank you. Today December 19th we are still shipping!

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