Fazal Sheikh, Saladho Hassan Ali, whose daughter, marakaba, faught off an attacker near hagadera camp in early 2000 (detail), 2000. Toned gelatin silver print. © Fazal Sheikh
Fazal Sheikh A Camel for the Son · Ramadan Moon · The Victor Weeps
Feb 13 - Jun 8, 2003

For more than a decade, American artist Fazal Sheikh has worked with African and Afghan refugees to spread awareness of international human rights issues. Fazal Sheikh: A Camel for the Son · Ramadan Moon · The Victor Weeps presents three series of photographs portraying refugees from Somalia and Afghanistan.

Sheikh documents displaced communities and their experiences by collaborating with them over long periods in the creation of formal portraits and landscapes. By using his subjects’ names as titles, bearing witness to their traumatic experiences as well as their hopes, and disseminating his work as activist art rather than photojournalism, Sheikh challenges the anonymity and clichés of mass–media representations of refugees. The resulting photographs and texts are respectful, graceful meditations on human gazes, gestures, and beliefs. They assert the dignity of those pictured while broadening our vocabulary for understanding ongoing global conflicts. These three series, which span Sheikh’s career, were also in part initiated through his pursuit of his familial heritage in Kenya and Pakistan.

A Camel for the Son (1992–2000) renders Somali women refugees in northeastern Kenya, first, as they struggle to nourish their children after enduring physical and sexual assault, and later, as some organize a committee to seek justice against their assailants. Ramadan Moon(2000) combines portraits, music, and texts to dwell upon the experiences of one woman, Seynab Azir Wardeere, who, after enduring intense trauma during the Somali civil war, attempts to celebrate Ramadan while under threat of eviction from an asylum–seekers’ center in the Netherlands. The Victor Weeps (1996–1998) depicts Afghan men, women, and children living for decades as refugees in northern Pakistan. Introspective portraits and testimonials offer a multifaceted view onto the experiences and beliefs of the Afghan people, whose country is again at the center of international conflict in the aftermath of September 11, 2001.

Four of Sheikh’s publications accompany the exhibition. Ramadan Moonand A Camel for the Son, as well as a DVD version of The Victor Weeps, comprise his International Human Rights Series, funded by the Volkart Foundation, Switzerland, with all proceeds going to the depicted communities (see www.fazalsheikh.org). The Victor Weeps book is published by Scalo, New York.

Fazal Sheikh was born in 1965 in New York City. Since graduating from Princeton University, he has collaborated with displaced communities across East Africa as well as in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Brazil, and Cuba. Sheikh has worked with the U.N. High Commission for Refugees, Médecins Sans Frontières, and the International Rescue Committee. The recipient of numerous awards, including the Infinity Award from the International Center of Photography and the Leica Medal of Excellence, Sheikh has received fellowships from the William J. Fulbright Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts, among others. His photographs are in collections such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Dabney Hailey
Former Linda Wyatt Gruber ’66 Curator of Painting, Sculpture, and Photography