Kander was born in
Tel Aviv, Israel. His father flew Boeing 707s for
El-Al but lost his eye and was unable to continue flying. His parents decided to start again in
South Africa and moved to
Johannesburg in 1963. Kander began taking pictures when he was 13 on a
Pentax camera, which he bought with his
Bar Mitzvah money. He states the pictures that he took then and until he was 17, although unaccomplished, have the same sense of quiet and unease that is part of his work today. After being drafted into the
South African Air Force, Kander worked in a darkroom printing aerial photographs. It was there he became certain he wanted to be a photographer. He moved to London in 1986, where he still resides with his wife Nicole and their three children. Kander is best known for his
Yangtze - The Long River series, for which he earned the
Prix Pictet Prize. Kander never photographed farther than twenty miles from the river itself. In the shadow of epic construction projects we see workers, fishermen, swimmers and a man washing his motorbike in the river. Dense architecture gives way to mountains in the upper reaches towards the river's Tibetan source - a sparsely populated area where the stream is mostly broken ice and just ankle deep. The photographs are dominated by immense architectural structures where humans are shown as small in their environment. Figures are dwarfed by landscapes of half completed bridges and colossal Western-style apartment blocks that are rapidly replacing traditional Chinese low-rise buildings and houseboats. In 2010 to 2012 Kander photographed a series of nudes -
Bodies. 6 Women. 1 Man - in his London studio. On 18 January 2009, Kander had 52 full colour portraits published in one issue of
The New York Times Magazine. These portraits were of the people surrounding US President
Barack Obama, from
Joe Biden (Vice President) to
Eugene Kang (Special Assistant to The President). This is the largest portfolio of work by the same photographer The New York Times Magazine has showcased in one single issue. In July 2012, Kander exhibited at the
National Portrait Gallery in London with a series of portraits celebrating London's hosting of the
2012 Summer Olympics. In 2014 Kander was among the 18 photographers chosen to be a part of
Constructing Worlds: Photography and Architecture in the Modern Age, an exhibition at the
Barbican Centre in London, and toured, which explored the ability of architectural photography to reveal wider truths about our society. His photography for the 2016
TIME Person of the Year cover was widely analyzed and acclaimed. Kander is a Trustee of
The Lowry in Salford, Greater Manchester. ==Publications==