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BEVERLY JOUBERT - PHOTOGRAPHER

Beverly’s work as a photographer has appeared in half a dozen National Geographic magazines (see also nationalgeographic.com) and has been featured in many major pieces, including a cover article called Lions of Darkness. Her work has been published in over a hundred magazines including Geo, African Wildlife and of course National Geographic. Also for Geographic she was represented in their best 100 images of the 20th Century and in Women Photographers, which exhibited in New York alongside the publication.

A number of films have been done on their work together, the best probably being the National  Geographic television’s A Passion for Africa. Beverly has featured in the film called The Photographers. In the public eye she has appeared on all the talk shows like Charlie Rose, the Today show, Larry King and Conan O'Brian, ABC Nightly News, and Good Morning America, talking about her work and life as a woman photographer in Africa. In October Beverly was nominated to the International League of Conservation Photographers, (www.conservationphotography.net

In 1997 she produced her first book, Hunting With The Moon, the society, about their work filming and researching lions in Botswana over a 14 year period. For Hyperion she produced a companion children’s book to Whispers and in 2000 she photographed The African Diaries, a book about the Joubert’s lives in the bush since 1980.A fourth book Elephant in the Kitchen published by Wildlife films press January 2006. The lastest release is Relentless Enemies: Lions and Buffalo published by National Geographic press September 2006.  Her work has been exhibited in France at Perpignon, all around Africa, the USA and London.

There is little doubt that Beverly is an icon of woman photographers in Africa. Her knowledge of the place and its spirit comes out in her work.

Beverly specializes in capturing a moment of natural history that crystallizes the action and power of animals doing what they do without them being aware of her. Her exhibition in France was about the poaching and what Botswana’s military are doing to stop it. Here she used the same hidden camera to let soldiers and poachers interact naturally treating them as equals to her usual animal subjects.

Her work is represented by National Geographic’s Image Sales Library and Getty. Any queries for individual images should be directed to National Geographic Image Sales at www.ngsimages.com





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