Details

When

May 9, 2024
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Where

Middle East Institute
1763 N St. NW
Washington, District of Columbia 20009 (Map)

About The Exhibition

The Middle East Institute's Arts & Culture Center in partnership with Tribe magazine cordially invites you to the opening night reception for Louder Than Hearts, a photo exhibition exploring the work of ten women photographers from the Arab World and Iran who capture the resilience, creativity and humanity of women in the region, often in the face of great adversity.

Louder Than Hearts reveals the role of both the photographers and their protagonists as trailblazers and catalysts for change in their communities, providing a portrait of women in the Middle East as voices of peace, courage, and hope. The leading Egyptian, Iranian, Jordanian, Lebanese, Palestinian, Saudi and Yemeni photographers explore the diversity of experiences and personal narratives told by women across a vast geographic area.

The title is adopted from a poetry collection on love and loss by Lebanese poet Zeina Hashem Beck.

Participating artists: Rehaf Al Batniji, Tasneem Alsultan, Thana Faroq, Tanya Habjouqa, Shiva Khademi, Heba Khalifa, Safaa Khatib, Rania Matar, Newsha Tavakolian, Carmen Yahchouchi

The exhibition is made possible with the generous support of MEI Board of Governors member and professional photographer Anne B. Keiser.

About The Event

The evening will feature a talk with curator and award-wining photographer Rania Matar, herself a participating artist, on the exhibition vision, the works on display, as well as her own practice. 

The evening as follows:

6:15pm: Art Talk

7:00pm: Curator Tour with Rania Matar

Please note that refreshments will be provided

About the Curator

Born and raised in Lebanon, Rania Matar moved to the U.S. in 1984. As a Lebanese-born Palestinian/American artist and mother, Matar's cross-cultural experience and personal narrative inform her photography. Her work captures intimate moments that transcend borders and cultures and explores themes of personal & collective identity through photos of women in the US and the Middle East. Matar’s work has been widely exhibited in museums worldwide including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Carnegie Museum of Art, National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC; Minneapolis Institute of Art; Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and more. Her photography is in the permanent collections of several museums.

Photo credits: (Farah (In her Burnt Car), Abey, Lebanon (2020), from the series 50 Years Later. Courtesy of Rania Matar. On view at the MEI Art Gallery.)