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Southeast Museum of Photography

 A Girl and Her Room

Rania Matar 

 

 

September 14 - December 14, 2012
 

Artist's Talk, Book Signing and Opening Reception: Friday, September 14, 6-8pm
Rania Matar: A Girl and Her Room
Christilla, Rabieh Lebanon 2010
"The room will be the first cocoon a girl creates for herself, of herself. It is the place she first attempts self-expression onto an environment. The development of a room shows the progress: pink gives way to glitter, stuffed animals to figurines. Pictures of animals are replaced by pictures of people and with objects no longer selected by a parent. Then to these she adds her own creations and soon the walls are taken over, and the closets, and the bed."
-Susan Minot, from A Girl and Her Room.

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

 

"The girls in these photographs willingly opened their doors to an outsider, trusted her, shared their intimacy with her and exposed themselves and their vulnerability. Rania attempted to get to the soul of each girl, to represent each one as truthfully as she could, and, by capturing each individual, to justify their trust in her." - Susan Minot
 

Rania Matar has produced an exhibition and a book of unique and subtle power. Focusing on contemporary young women from vastly differing cultures in the United States and Lebanon, her project, A Girl and Her Room, reveals the complex lives of her subjects in the unique setting of the girls' own rooms. Besides the expected cultural and economic differences and similarities that inevitably are drawn out using such an approach, these portraits of the girls and their bedrooms reveal a dizzying array of personalities, dreams, hopes, wishes and frustrations in settings that are clearly expressions of the girls' individual identities. The nuances shown in each room, and in the portrait of each young woman, reveal an acute photographer's eye for telling detail.

 

Rania Matar started out this series quite modestly documenting the transition from childhood into adulthood of her own daughters and their friends through the turbulent teenage years. That most elusive of quarries: catching the metamorphosis of free spirited, complex, layered and multi-faceted personalities "mid-flight" each on their own unique journey to self and adulthood became Matar's quest.

 

      Double Exposure

    
 
Rania Matar: A Girl and Her Room
     Mimi, Winchester MA 2011
   
"Rania Matar's series, A Girl and Her Room, is a powerful statement about the persistence of Western ideals of beauty and the proliferation of media images and commercial products directed at young women and their insecurities - "Am I beautiful?" "Am I loved?" "Who are my friends?" "Who are my role models?" Matar's complex social portrait of female adolescence, an unusually intimate collaboration between photographer (herself a mother of teenage girls) and subject, is also a revealing documentary of place - the teenager's bedroom as a sanctuary of self-creation and experimentation." - Susan L. Stoops, Curator of Contemporary Art, Worcester Art Museum

     

 

ARTIST STATEMENT

 

As a mother of teenage daughters I watch their passage from girlhood into adulthood, fascinated with the transformation taking place, the adult personality shaping up and a self-consciousness now replacing the carefree world they had known and lived in so far. I started photographing them and their girlfriends, and quickly realized that they were very aware of each other's presence, and that their being in a group affected very much whom they were portraying to the world. From there, emerged the idea of photographing each girl by herself. I originally asked the girls to choose where they wanted to be photographed. After a number of them chose their bedrooms, I realized that was the nexus of a project. The room was a metaphor, an extension of the girl, but also the girl seemed to be part of the room, to fit in, just like everything else in the room. 

 

While I started this work with my daughters and their friends, and with daughters of my friends, I eventually moved away from only photographing girls that I knew well. I enjoyed discovering new girls and building with them a photographer/model relationship with no expectation or holding back from either of us. It allowed me to meet girls from all different backgrounds and different worlds. I always spent time with each girl, so she was comfortable with me and eventually the photography session became a beautiful and intimate collaboration. I was discovering a person on the cusp on becoming an adult, but desperately holding on to the child she barely outgrew, a person on the edge between two worlds, trying to come to terms with this transitional time in her life and adjust to the person she is turning into.  Read more. 

 

ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER
 

Rania Matar was born and raised in Lebanon and moved to the U.S. in 1984. Originally trained as an architect at the American University of Beirut and Cornell University, she studied photography at the New England School of Photography and the Maine Photographic Workshops in Mexico. She teaches photography at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design and in refugee camps in Lebanon.
 

Matar's work focuses mainly on women and women's issues. Earlier projects recorded the lives of women and children in the Middle East, and over the past three years she has completed A Girl and Her Room and started a new project L'Enfant-Femme. Matar has won numerous awards, including the 2011 Legacy Award at the Griffin Museum of Photography, 2011 Massachusetts Cultural Council artist fellowship first place at the New England Photographer Biennial, Women in Photography International, and the Prix de la Photographie Paris. She has accumulated honorable mentions at the 2010 UNICEF Picture of the Year Award, the 2010 Lens Culture Exposure International, the Silver Eye Center for Photography Fellowship, CENTER and the Photo Review. She was selected as one of the Top 100 Distinguished Women Photographers by Women in Photography, and was a finalist for the distinguished Foster Award at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston. Her images are in the permanent collections of several museums worldwide.

 

A Girl and Her Room, chosen as a top fifty winner in Critical Mass, is Matar's second book published by Umbrage Editions with essays by Anne Tucker and Susan Minot. Her first book, Ordinary Lives, was published in 2009 by the Quantuck Lane Press.

 

All images are pigment inkjet prints.

 

Click HERE for press articles and official website.

 

   

 

"...the girls in her pictures, like so many adolescents today, seem caught in that precarious balance between pensive and insecure, on the one hand, and mature beyond their years, on the other. With an artist's unerring eye and a mother's sixth sense, Matar captures the horror vacui of these private spaces in all their glorious color and intricate detail, somehow making us feel like privileged insiders who have inexplicably been invited past the "Do Not Enter" sign on the door!" - Karen Haas, Curator of Photographs, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
 

 Rania Matar: A Girl and Her RoomRania Matar: A Girl and Her RoomRania Matar: A Girl and Her Room

       Shannon, Boston MA 2010              Reem, Doha Lebanon 2010             Anna, Winchester MA 2009

 


MUSEUM HOURS
OPEN - Tues, Thurs, Fri: 11-5 pm; Wed: 11-7 pm; Weekends: 1-5 pm
June, July and December Hours: Tues-Sun: 12-4 pm

CLOSED - Mondays and for the following dates:
December 17 - January 11, Daytona 500 Weekend, Daytona State College Spring Break, Easter Sunday, July 4, July 30 - August 13, Thanksgiving Weekend.


MUSEUM LOCATION
Unless noted otherwise, all museum exhibitions, events and films are presented at the Southeast Museum of Photography which is located on the Daytona Beach campus of Daytona State College at 1200 International Speedway Blvd, three miles east of 1-95. 

The museum is located in the Mori Hosseini Center (Bld. 1200). Visitor parking is available. Gallery Admission is free. For detailed exhibition and program information visit www.smponline.org or call the museum information hotline at (386) 506-4475.
 
Daytona State College prohibits discrimination and assures equal opportunity in employment and education services to all individuals without regard to age, ancestry, belief, color, disability, ethnicity, genetic information, gender, marital status, national origin, political affiliation, race, religion, sex, and veteran status. For more details, read our policy at this link Equal Opportunity Statement or contact: Job B. Clement, Chair of the Equity Committee at 386-506-3403 or 1200 W. International Speedway Blvd., Daytona Beach, Fl. 32114.

 

Southeast Museum of Photography Partners

 

Daytona State College

 Southeast Museum of Photography
Southeast Museum of Photography  

 

A Service of
Daytona State College

 

1200 W. International Speedway Blvd.
Daytona Beach, FL 32114

(386) 506-4475

 

  

 

 Double Exposure

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