԰AV

MENU

Article, Arts & Culture

Capturing Our Stories: An Exhibition of Syrian Children’s Photography

September 26, 2016

We read and hear the stories of refugees coming to Canada from the perspective of the media and in the news, but what to do they want to say about their own lives and their own experiences?

This summer, ԰AV’s Vancity Office of Community Engagement partnered with the  Moving Ahead Program (MAP) to deliver a series of photography workshops to young Syrian children who recently arrived in Vancouver as refugees.  The goal of the project was to create story-telling space to empower the children to take hold over the narratives that define them. MAP supported children and parents during the entire process, from enrolment till the opening night of the exhibit. The project aimed at giving the children tools and information to explore the use of imagery and artistic expression to tell the stories of their lives.

“Mainstream interest in refugee lives comes with a long list of prescribed fantasies about their experiences,” noted Capturing Our Stories’ curator and organizer Shawk Alani in an interview with . “Creating a space where kids have agency to actualize their imagination on their own terms felt like the most important things to try to do.” Alani co-facilitated the photography workshops with photographer and engineer Nawar Tamawi. A recent immigrant to Canada himself, Tamawi is a street photographer well known for his , which attempts to fight stereotypical views and showcase “the beauty of Iraq.”

The first two workshops covered some of the basics of photography, including framing, angles, lighting, exposure, subject, distance, and depth of field. After the second session, each of the students were provided with their own disposable film camera with 27-exposures, and had a two-week window to capture images of their lives. Thereafter they reconvened for a session on art show curation, where Alani and Tamawi were joined by photographer  and designer . The instructors helped the children identify themes and relationships within the photographs. During this final workshop the children each selected four images for the exhibit. All three workshops were held on campus.

The opening of Capturing Our Stories at the Interurban Art Gallery on August 31 was well attended, and most of the artists were in attendance — proudly showing off their work, posing for photos, and even signing autographs.

Media Coverage of Capturing Our Stories
CBC (article and audio)
The Tyee (article)
rabble.ca (article and photo gallery)

Latest/Related Updates

  • September 25, 2024

    September 25, 2024

    The release of States of Injury — with Wendy Brown marks Below the Radar’s 250th episode—a major milestone since the podcast’s inception in 2018.

  • July 10, 2024

    July 10, 2024

    On June 22, the cast and crew of Project Limelight’s production of East Side Story were greeted with applause as a full house welcomed the young performers back to the Fei and Milton Wong Experimental Theatre stage.

  • January 10, 2024

    January 10, 2024

    Our Below the Radar podcast mini-series See How We Run! looked at local arts collectives and organizations, highlighting conversations about creation, spacemaking, accessibility, and self-determination within the framework of Vancouver’s cityscape.

  • August 15, 2023

    August 15, 2023

    With details of our 5-year anniversary celebration event to come, let’s take a sneak peek of the upcoming season.

  • July 26, 2023

    July 26, 2023

    Since September 2022, we’ve held 42 events and workshops, released 33 episodes, and engaged more than 25,000 podcast listeners. During that time, working diligently behind the scenes—editing podcast audio, and supporting communications and events programming—was our interim Programs Assistant Samantha Walters, who we are pleased to announce has now moved into a continuing role in the office.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
SMS
Email
Copy

Stay Up to Date

Get the latest on upcoming events by subscribing to our newsletter below.