Robben Island: Echoes from the Island

There are places in the world where silence is not the absence of sound, but the presence of memory. Robben Island is one such place.

Set adrift in the cold waters of Table Bay, the island exists as both geography and testimony — a site where the physical landscape has absorbed the weight of human endurance.

In Matthew Willman’s hands, this island is not simply documented — it is felt.

Created during an extended period living on the island, this body of work resists spectacle. Instead, it leans into stillness. The images do not shout history; they hold it. They invite the viewer into a slower, more intimate encounter — one where light, texture, and absence become the language through which the past speaks.

Through analogue process and darkroom craft, each photograph carries a tactile weight, as if the silver itself remembers. Willman’s approach is deeply human. Rather than attempting to reconstruct suffering, he creates space for reflection. His work engages with a central paradox of Robben Island: how a place designed to break the human spirit became, for many, a crucible of resilience, dignity, and ultimately, forgiveness.

In the end, Robben Island: Echoes from the Island is not about the past alone. It is about the enduring capacity of the human spirit to transcend it.

B Section guard tower, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Cell bathroom tap, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Island Lighthouse, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Island shipwreck, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Mandela courtyard, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Mandela prison cell, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Penguins of the island, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Prison tower, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Prisoner 46664 cell key, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Robben Island, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Stones of remembrance, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Wild island & tower, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

whispering grasses, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

B Section guard tower, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Cell bathroom tap, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Island Lighthouse, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Island shipwreck, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Mandela courtyard, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Mandela prison cell, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Penguins of the island, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Prison tower, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Prisoner 46664 cell key, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Robben Island, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Stones of remembrance, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

Wild island & tower, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

whispering grasses, 2001

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint 1/1 $1 800

Silver Gelatin analogue handprint Artist Proof $1 600

The visual process:

Working primarily in the darkroom Willman produces one-of-a-kind silver gelatin prints. Each work is hand-crafted and unrepeatable, resisting the conventions of editioned analogue photography and positioning the photograph as a singular object.

Alongside his analogue practice, Willman’s digital works extend similar concerns with perception, scale, and temporality, while remaining grounded in a disciplined visual language.

His work is exhibited internationally and is held in private and institutional collections.

Willman lives and works in South Africa.

Robben Island: Echoes from the Island

There are places in the world where silence is not the absence of sound, but the presence of memory. Robben Island is one such place.

Set adrift in the cold waters of Table Bay, the island exists as both geography and testimony — a site where the physical landscape has absorbed the weight of human endurance.

In Matthew Willman’s hands, this island is not simply documented — it is felt.

Created during an extended period living on the island, this body of work resists spectacle. Instead, it leans into stillness. The images do not shout history; they hold it. They invite the viewer into a slower, more intimate encounter — one where light, texture, and absence become the language through which the past speaks.

Through analogue process and darkroom craft, each photograph carries a tactile weight, as if the silver itself remembers. Willman’s approach is deeply human. Rather than attempting to reconstruct suffering, he creates space for reflection. His work engages with a central paradox of Robben Island: how a place designed to break the human spirit became, for many, a crucible of resilience, dignity, and ultimately, forgiveness.

In the end, Robben Island: Echoes from the Island is not about the past alone. It is about the enduring capacity of the human spirit to transcend it.

B Section guard tower, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Cell bathroom tap, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Island Lighthouse, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Island shipwreck, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Mandela courtyard, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Mandela prison cell, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Penguins of the island, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Prison tower, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Prisoner 46664 cell key, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Robben Island, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Stones of remembrance, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

Wild island & tower, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

whispering grasses, 2001

Price range: $1,600.00 through $1,800.00

The visual process:

Working primarily in the darkroom Willman produces one-of-a-kind silver gelatin prints. Each work is hand-crafted and unrepeatable, resisting the conventions of editioned analogue photography and positioning the photograph as a singular object.

Alongside his analogue practice, Willman’s digital works extend similar concerns with perception, scale, and temporality, while remaining grounded in a disciplined visual language.

His work is exhibited internationally and is held in private and institutional collections.

Willman lives and works in South Africa.