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Award-Winning Photographer Abdi Roble Brings The Somali Documentary Project to Twin Cities

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Four-Month Minnesota Residency at Ubah Medical Academy at The International Education Center in Minneapolis

 

MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 1 /PRNewswire/ -- In partnership with Arts Midwest, award-winning photographer Abdi Roble continues his ongoing, expansive documentary initiative The Somali Documentary Project in the Twin Cities. The four-month residency began on October 2, 2006.

 

About Abdi Roble

 

Abdi Roble immigrated to the United States from Mogadishu, Somalia, in 1989 and later moved to Columbus, Ohio, where he developed his passion for photography. He started two photography groups - the Focus Group (1998) and the African American Photographers of North America (1999). He is also the founder of the Somali Documentary Project Inc. (2003). His exhibitions include: One Month in Europe with Leica (2000), Leica Portrait of Cuba (2002), Japan: A Leica Perspective (2004) and, most recently, the Somali Diaspora (2005-2006) and Against Forgetting: Beyond Genocide and Civil War (2006). Roble is the recipient of the 2004 Ohio Arts Council Individual Artist Fellowship and 2006 Greater Columbus Arts Council Individual Artist Fellowship.

 

The Somali Documentary Project: A Brief History

 

Three years ago, Roble embarked on a project documenting the surviving traditions of the first generation of Somali immigrants in Columbus, Ohio. The ensuing series of photographs was the first in an ongoing initiative titled The Somali Documentary Project. The project serves as an archival record of the experiences of the Somali diaspora as its members weave the cultural practices of their homeland into the fabric of their new lives in the United States. Forced to leave Somalia by a brutal regime change marked by violent civil strife, the Somali people living in the United States are relatively recent immigrants who are just beginning the long process of adopting the language and cultural practices of their host country. By recording this moment of change, The Somali Documentary Project intends to capture an important transition in the cultural history of the Somali community. The Somali Documentary Project has a three-pronged goal: to archive a record of the community before assimilation, to educate and create understanding within the host communities, and to draw international attention to what is happening in Somalia.

 

Previously, Roble's photographs of the Somali community in Columbus were featured at the Ohio Arts Council's Verne Riffe Center for Government and the Arts. This exhibition was also featured at MAPP's Coffee + Tea and the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, and has toured to North Dakota at The Sibyl Center in Stanley, CHARISM in Fargo, and several schools in Minot. Roble's photographs have also been featured as part of the Minneapolis-based Intermedia Arts exhibition Against Forgetting: Beyond Genocide and Civil War. In October of 2006, Roble's work on The Somali Documentary Project won the Arts Freedom Award from the South Side Settlement House in Columbus.

 

The Somali Documentary Project in Minnesota

 

Due to enthusiastic community response to this program in our region, Roble will expand this project in the next four months by documenting the experiences of the Somali diaspora in Minnesota, home to the largest population of Somali immigrants in the United States. The residency consists of two components:

    -- Artist-in-Residence at Ubah Medical Academy

       Roble will serve as artist-in-residence for an intensive, four-week

       course for high-school students at the International Education Center

       in Minneapolis. The residency will take place at the Ubah Medical

       Academy, located within the center. Roble and the Somali Documentary

       Project team will be assisting art teacher Anthony Theis in the

       development of art curriculum at the primarily Muslim school - a

       daunting challenge given the Muslim culture's sensitivity about art.

       Many Somali parents are not comfortable with their children depicting

       human faces in art. However, given the positive response to Roble's

       previous exhibitions in Minneapolis, the community elders and the staff

       at the Ubah Medical Academy have given strong support to an

       unprecedented art class that will focus on documentary photography.

       Roble will work with the students for three days each week on form,

       composition, and content of documentary photography. Students will

       document their school, education in their homes, and their religious

       education. Team member Doug Rutledge will work with the students on

       developing the text that would accompany an exhibition of their

       photography. An exhibition of the student photography developed in

       collaboration with the Somali Documentary Project Team will serve as

       the culmination of this unique residency.

    -- Minnesota Residency and Exhibition

       Roble will live in Minnesota and document its substantial Somali

       population. He will spend significant time in the Twin Cities as well

       as in greater Minnesota, exploring the transition of the Somali

       population to living in their host country while still retaining the

       vibrant culture of the homeland they recently left behind. Roble and

       his team intend to document all aspects of Somali life in Minnesota,

       since it is home to the largest Somali community in the United States.

 

Project Team

 

Roble will work in close conjunction with a team of arts professionals to curate these photographs for future exhibition. The project team consists of:

    -- Tariq Tarey, project manager

       A Somali immigrant to the United States, Tarey first immigrated to

       Syria, where he earned a B.A. in political science from the

       University of Damascus. He is a trained career consultant and

       established photographer in his own right, and his work has been shown

       publicly at The Ohio State University and the MPX Gallery in Columbus,

       Ohio.

    -- Doug Rutledge, writer

       Doug Rutledge holds a Ph.D. in English from the University of Chicago.

       He has taught English language and literature at the collegiate level

       for about 20 years. His book, Ceremony and Text in the Renaissance, was

       published by the University of Delaware Press. He has had three plays

       produced, including Run, Run from the Setting of the Sun, which was

       performed both in Columbus, Ohio, and New York. He has also published

       numerous poems and essays. Most recently, his poetry appeared in

       Whatever House We Come From, published by Puddinghouse Press. Rutledge

       has also written for the Somali Link newspaper.

    -- Stanley Kayne, photography editor

       A graduate of The Ohio State University with a B.A. in photography and

       printmaking, Kayne has had an extensive career in photography based in

       New York and Washington, D.C. His assignments have included photography

       editor at USA Today and TIME Magazine, and deputy director of

       photography for U.S. News & World Report.

 

    The Somali Documentary Project Sponsors

 

The Somali Documentary Project is made possible through the generous support of The McKnight Foundation, St. Paul Travelers Foundation, Thrivent Financial for Lutherans Foundation, and Best Buy. Additional support is provided by Twin Cities International School, Ubah Medical Academy, and the Ohio Arts Council. The project is managed by Arts Midwest.

 

About Arts Midwest

 

Arts Midwest connects the arts to audiences throughout the nine-state region of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Through strategic alliances, key programs also reach Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Texas. One of six regional arts organizations in the United States, Arts Midwest's mission is to connect people throughout the Midwest and the world to meaningful arts opportunities, sharing creativity, knowledge, and understanding across boundaries. Cultural programs initiated by Arts Midwest - including performances by high-quality theater, dance, and music ensembles; educational arts activities; visual arts exhibitions; and conferences - reach close to one million people annually, enhancing the quality of life in hundreds of cities, towns, and rural areas across the Midwest. Throughout its programming, Arts Midwest maintains a commitment to artistic quality and to reaching underserved audiences and communities.

 

Complete information on The Somali Documentary Project and Arts Midwest

is available online at http://www.artsmidwest.org

 

Source: PRNEWSWire, Dec 01, 2006



 





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