Английская Википедия:Ala Kheir

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox artist Ala Kheir (Шаблон:Lang-ar, born 1 April, 1985) is a Sudanese photographer, cinematographer and mechanical engineer. He became known as one of the founders of the Sudanese Photographers Group in Khartoum in 2009 and through international exhibitions of his photographs, as well as for networking and training for photographers in Africa.

Biography and artistic career

Файл:Sudanese visual artist Amna Elhassan.jpg
Portrait of Sudanese visual artist Amna Elhassan by Kheir, 2020

Kheir was born in Nyala, South Darfur, and moved to the capital Khartoum with his parents as a child. During summer holidays, he spent frequent visits in Nyala and as a photographer, he later started documenting people's lives in the Marrah Mountains region.[1]

Kheir studied mechanical engineering in Malaysia and started as a self-taught photographer. Upon his return to Sudan, he and other photographers in Khartoum established the Sudanese Photographers Group. This group started taking photographs and teaching photography as an art form and included other aspiring photographers into their workshops and exhibitions.[2]

Kheir also has been involved in networking and training for photographers in Africa, notably with the 'Centers of Learning for Photography in Africa' in Johannesburg, South Africa.[3] This network brings together African platforms active in photography education, where the members "exchange ideas and teaching methodologies and also learn as trainers."[2]

An example of such training and networking were a series of workshops and photo exhibitions in Khartoum between 2014 and 2016, called 'Mugran Foto Week'. The exhibition of 2016 presented the collective results of a workshop called 'Modern Times', conducted the year before by photographers Michelle Lukidis from South Africa and André Lützen from Germany.[4]

For several years, Kheir served as a judge on the panel for the international Contemporary African Photography Prize (CAP) in Basel, Switzerland, "awarded annually to five photographers, whose works were created on the African continent, or which engage with the African diaspora."[5][6]

Kheir's photographs have been published by The Guardian, Brownbook magazine, Dubai, and the World Architecture Community.[7][8] In 2020, his work was featured among 17 contemporary African photographers in the book The Journey. New Positions in African Photography.[9] From 2008 to 2018, these African photographers had been invited by local German cultural centres of the Goethe-Institut to attend masterclasses, curated by Simon Njami and established African photographers, such as Akinbode Akinbiyi.[10] Along with other African photographers who were part of these masterclasses, a portrait of Kheir's work was published in the book The Journey - New positions in African photography.[11]

In the French book on 52 contemporary African artists Oh! AfricArt, Kheir and his photographs are featured as the only artist from Sudan.[12] For their 2022 contest, World Press Photo nominated Kheir as jury member from Africa.[13] During the 2023 Sudan conflict, The Guardian published a feature article in their series "My best Shot" on one of Kheir's pictures of Khartoum and his personal approach to photography.[14] In the 2023 group exhibition Reframing Neglect in New York, Kheir was represented with pictures of people living on the outskirts of Khartoum and suffering from "neglected tropical diseases," which include leprosy, sleeping sickness and river blindness.[15]

While engaged in an online conversation in October 2022 with Durham University Library Special Collections and the Photography Legacy Project (PLP), Kheir was arrested and harassed by Sudanese security police, presumably because he was suspected to be involved in citizens' protests.[16]

In the magazine article "Street Photography: A Glimpse into Khartoum Architecture and Urban Design", Kheir reflected on the nature of street photography:[17]

Шаблон:Blockquote

Group and individual exhibitions

  • Reframing Neglect, Milan, New York and Abu Dhabi, Italy, USA and United Arab Emirates 2022/2023[18]
  • Revisiting Khartoum, African Capitals, France 2017
  • Revisiting Khartoum, Dakar Biennale, Senegal 2016
  • Khartoum 2 Addis, Venice Biennale, Italy 2015
  • Africa, Big chance, Big chance, Milan, Italy 2014
  • Invisible Borders, group exhibition, Addis Photo Festival, Ethiopia 2012
  • Khartoum (solo exhibition), Addis Photo Festival 2012
  • The Un-governables, group exhibition in New York 2012
  • Feel the color, Khartoum, 2009 (co-exhibition with Dia Khalil)
  • 50+1, Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur 2007[19]

Awards

  • Our Continent, Our Future photo competition, 2nd prize, 2013
  • Connect for Climate photo competition, 2nd prize, 2012
  • UN education photograph, 2010[19]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Further reading

External links

Шаблон:Authority control