Cairo

Gizeh in morning Smog, Cairo 2020

Off the beaten track of group bus tours and pharaoh nostalgia, Cairo reveals its crumbling face. Dust, smoke, and earthy-brown blocks, not quite slum, not quite residential. Trash and arid air. The cultural heart of Egypt and the Arab world strictly severs illusion and reality. The pyramids of Giza were once around 15 kilometers from the city center. In the meantime, urban sprawl has come within meters of them. The present-day encroaches on the past. Hieroglyphs, sphinxes and labyrinths that lead into tombs inevitably spring to mind while, in Cairo itself, solitary, dust-coated car skeletons clutter the roadside, awaiting their burial. Carpets are draped over fences, to be sold or beaten clean.

Max Cramer and Patric Colling, Cairo Slide Show, Cairo 2021
Young guy smoking, Cairo 2017
Lunch break, Cairo 2017
Pelicans, Cairo 2017
Cairo Zoo, Cairo 2017
Manshiat Nasir, Cairo 2018
Trash road, Cairo 2020

The countless apartment blocks themselves have the look of carpets. Here and there, brightly painted balconies or clothes hung out to dry weave irregular color patterns into a pre-apocalyptic ruin. Sounds of engines, canisters, smoke—and commerce. Anything that sells is sold. Behind closed doors and on the markets, we are invited to document what we see. Sugar and black tea. Women smoking and talking about life. On the street, children laugh at us, curiosity etched into their faces. Everywhere there are dogs, goats, and graffiti. Satellite dishes beam the world into living rooms. And construction is in full swing: stone and rammed earth; men carrying rubble and plastic.

Tap water, Cairo 2018
Ring Rd # 1, Cairo 2018
Gizeh, Cairo 2020
Sunset Smog, Cairo 2020
City of the Dead, Cairo 2020
Al khalifa market, Cairo 2017
Coffeshop Company, Cairo 2017
Man, Jesus and Maria, Cairo, 2017
Sphinx, Cairo 2017
Sphinx and Gizeh, Cairo 2017
Gizeh Smog, Cairo 2020