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Casimir Zagourski

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Name
  
Casimir Zagourski

Known for
  
Casimir Zagourski wwwlibraryyaleeduafricanzagourskicoverpicjpg
Full Name
  
Kazimierz Zagorski

Born
  
9 August 1880

Notable work
  
postcards; portraits; L'Afrique qui disparait!

Died
  
January 10, 1941, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Education
  
Imperial Russian Air Service (Imagery intelligence)

Casimir Zagourski (in Polish Kazimierz Zagorski) (1883–1944) was a pioneering photographer of Central African peoples and customs.

Zagourski was born in Zhytomyr in 1883. He was of Polish ethnicity, from the noble Clan of Ostoja. He served in the Imperial Russian Air Force until 1917, rising to the rank of colonel, and in the Polish military during 1920.

He emigrated from Europe in 1924 and settled in Leopoldville (Belgian Congo), gallicizing his name and opening a photographic studio. Between 1924 and his death he travelled widely in Central Africa, undertaking expeditions to photograph "disappearing" African folkways in 1929, 1932, 1935 and 1937.

His albums and a postcard series collectively titled L'Afrique qui disparait! gained him considerable renown.

References

Casimir Zagourski Wikipedia