Self portraits

Self portraits
Showing posts with label proverbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label proverbs. Show all posts

Friday, February 14, 2014

Shalom / Nabad Opening Night -- January 31, 2014

The torah commands us thirty-six times to "Welcome the stranger and love them as yourself."

I was born in North Minneapolis and my family moved to St. Louis Park when I was five. My friend Mark Z, who lived up the street from us growing up, had parents who were holocaust survivors -- his mom, Sabina Zimering, wrote a book about her experience, called Hiding in the Open. My friend Mary R had parents who came from Poland to escape the war. My grandmother lived with us often, although for many years, she had an old house in Duluth, too. She was Russian, and by modern standards, rather unkempt and frighteningly direct. My friends were scared of her, but I always thought she was a pussycat, and that she was instrumental to my survival.

This show is an artistic rebirth for me. It's my first solo exhibition in Minneapolis, in an indoor space! I've made these portraits for the past five years -- they are of friends, other artists, people I've worked with, or know in the community. They're all made from live sittings and photos I take of the model, with one exception (Mogadishu Calling Minneapolis, which is an invention).


The first time I met a group of Somali elders, I worked at a clinic on the west bank in Minneapolis. My manager gave me a stack of surveys, and said, "Go out in the waiting room, and give these out." So I went out in the waiting room and found the room full of pairs of people, young and old, or sometimes middle-age to old, as most of the east African patients at the clinic were with their interpreters, as they didn't speak English. I spent a lot of time over the next several years working with these patients, in groups of two or three, with interpreters, and found these elders generally to be friendly, sweet, polite, more European than mid-western, to have a sense of humor, and  that many are willing to teach as well as to learn.

When I was growing up and there was need for a dentist, we called Irving. Need a butcher? Call Mordechai! Need an accountant? Call Sheila!
Working in the local east African community, when you need a physical therapist, you call Mohamed. Need a mortgage banker? Call Abdi! Need an interpreter? Call Nafiso!
Shalom / Nabad ~ Pamela Gaard portraits at Traffic Zone, Minneapolis

This article written by Brian Klaas appeared recently in the StarTribune, and it represents the successful community that I see here - http://www.startribune.com/opinion/commentaries/242492981.html
One in five Somalis is employed in a Somali-owned business, and I see a strong entrepreneurial workforce and a community flourishing -- many folks getting their citizenship, completing college degrees, starting families, gaining professional employment, and buying homes.

I've worked in the east African community for six years now, and feel fortunate to have a job I love.  Learning a few words in Somali has brought me new friends and closer to the elders in particular. I love to see the joy and surprise on their faces when we exercise together and I count from one to ten in af Soomaali!

Galab wanaagsan. Bal an iskaa baro. Magacaygu waa Pam, Magacaa? Waxaan aqaan wax yar af Soomaali! 

Monday, July 8, 2013

Gratitude

Thanks to everyone who came out to Susan Hensel Gallery on Cedar and 35th Ave. in South Minneapolis to see my portraits and proverbs ~! The next exhibit of these works (and further development) will be in late January, and, in winter months in Minnesota, it will be a challenge to get people out ~ thanks to Munira Hassan and Kayowe Mune for the photo.

Monday, May 27, 2013

Exhibition Review ~ Paintings & Proverbs

This art review Paintings & Proverbs ~ Exhibition Reviewwww.lasplash.com by Amy Munice, captures the breadth of my work with Somali and other east African elders. I teach that a healthy diet, exercise, fresh (outdoor) air, visits to waters edge, community engagement, yoga, tai chi, breathing, friendship, creativity  (poetry, music, dancing, gardening, drawing, painting, stitching, I might even add cooking) along with mediation and/or prayer, all can make positive contributions to our health -- improving ills of all nature - physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual.

My exhibit at Susan Hensel (window) Gallery is up through June 24th. I'll also exhibit my portraits and proverbs in the early part of next year at Traffic Zone, in Minneapolis. Many individuals in the community have helped and acted as interpreters to create my portraits of elders, who are non-English speakers -- including scholars, teachers, colleagues, and friends.

Installation view at Susan Hensel Gallery - through June 24

Pamela Gaard “Painting and Proverbs” Exhibition Review – Transcending History of Genocide, Religious and Language Barriers | Splash Magazines | Los Angeles

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Paintings & Proverbs ~ Susan Hensel Gallery (window) installation


Paintings & Proverbs will exhibit through June 24 ~ 3441 Cedar Ave. S, Minneapolis, MN 55407

The twin cities DailyPlanet ~ http://www.tcdailyplanet.net/events/paintings-proverbs  lists it as top pic~!


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Friday, April 19, 2013

Paintings & Proverbs

My upcoming exhibition, Paintings & Proverbs includes portraits of elders who have settled in Minneapolis from e. Africa, along with sayings and proverbs which defend their old-world wisdom in their native languages ~ exploring ways in which we inherit our cultural wisdom and identity. It's been a fun way for me to learn to speak af-Soomaali (Somali language) and a few words of Oromo.

This exhibition will be on view from May 7 to June 24 ~ at Susan Hensel (Window) Gallery, 3441 Cedar Ave So, Minneapolis, MN 55407. The gallery is not open for this event - the exhibition is in the storefront window only, which faces Cedar Avenue. For this reason, there is no official opening, but I'll post a few celebratory events during the 7weeks in which the exhibition is up.

Thanks to my many collaborators, teachers, interpreters and friends from our e. African community ~ !
For more information:  http://mnartists.org/event.do?rid=332758

Portrait of Rade
Portrait of Khadra
Portrait of U

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Cad iyo Caano

For the past six years, I've taught elders from east Africa about diabetes and carbohydrates, exercise and frostbite, but (as is the case with teaching. . .) I learn a lot along the way. The folks who lived in rural Somalia lived healthier lives in many ways than we do here -  there was not much diabetes or obesity, and, routinely folks tell me that when they return to Africa they lose weight that they gained here.
Waxaan ku hadlaa wax yar af-Soomaali (I know a little Somali language.)

Back home, traditionally, one-third of our Somali elders were agricultural; one-third nomadic, and one-third city-dwellers. The agrarian folks grew their own maize and ground it into meal to make the staple food, cangeero. They grew pumpkins and greens, as well as sorghum, which was eaten as a grain. (Check out xawaash.com for more info -- including recipes -- on Somali cuisine.)  The nomads traded meat and milk from their goats and camels for grain and vegetables with the agricultural folks, and both traded with city-dwellers for other things they needed. There is an insulin-like substance in camel milk, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22751901 which partially explains the lower incidence of diabetes back home. Herbs and barks were used as medicine, to treat everything from GI illness to broken bones.

Elderly men who were nomadic earlier on in their lives are still in good health today, defying western medicine with their dietary habits of eating 'cad iyo caano' (pron. 'aad iyo aano'), which means a piece (of cooked goat meat) and milk. But, back home the meat was lean, grass fed, organic, and just moments from walking around to cooking on the fire. The camel milk, likewise, was fresh from grass fed animals, unpasteurized, with the cream on top.

Deg-deg door ma dhasho ~ [Hurry hurry; no blessing (Haste makes waste)]


I am learning af-Soomaali (Somali language) from small groups of elders who live here in Minneapolis, and these discs and small painted objects act as mnemonics. The proverbs are rich in narratives that tell the wisdom of the culture, often as they are spoken by its elders.  They represent my research into learning the language and proverbs from different parts of east Africa, mostly Somalia. These small paintings are made on re-purposed cd's, lp's and airline trays and they are about 6" x 6" to 12" x 12".  These, along with my portraits will be featured in my next exhibition ~ at Susan Hensel Gallery (the window gallery) in Minneapolis (Cedar Ave. S. @ 35th Street) in mid-May.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Portraits & Proverbs



Portrait of U

Somali proverbs -
Naag waa belaayo loo baahan yahay. (Woman is a disaster one cannot do without.)
Calool dheregsani calool baahan kama naxdo. (A man with a full belly thinks no one is hungry.)
Hooyo xaarkay dhashay "Xaayow" tiraahdaa. (A mother has given birth to a piece of shit, but says "My Handsome!")
Baryaaye waa aadane, bixiyana Eebbe weeye. (Man proposes but God disposes.)

Yiddish proverbs:
Ale vayber hobn yerushe fun zeyer muter Khaye. (All women are heirs to Mother Eve.)
If the rich could hire the poor to die for them, the poor would make a very nice living. ~Jewish Proverb

Read more: http://www.gadel.info/2011/03/jewish-proverbs.html#ixzz2Cd1W7fST
If the rich could hire the poor to die for them, the poor would make a very nice living. ~Jewish Proverb

Read more: http://www.gadel.info/2011/03/jewish-proverbs.html#ixzz2Cd1W7fST
If the rich could hire the poor to die for them, the poor would make a very nice living. ~Jewish Proverb

Read more: http://www.gadel.info/2011/03/jewish-proverbs.html#ixzz2Cd1W7fST
God could not be everywhere and therefore he made mothers. - Jewish Proverb
Der mentsh trakht un got lakht. (Man plans, God laughs.)