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    Homelands and Histories

    Life stories in closeup: New photography exhibit brings lost homelands to Houston

    Tarra Gaines
    May 23, 2017 | 4:58 pm

    The space between photographer and subject can be one of vast distance to microscopic proximity in both a real, measurable length but also on a metaphorical level. When gazing at the faces gazing back at the photographer in the new Museum of Fine Arts exhibition Homelands and Histories: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh that figurative distance between Sheikh and the people and places he captures sometimes seems infinitesimal.

    The new exhibition, now on view until October 1, highlights the recent acquisition of 75 photographs from several of Sheikh’s major series and projects and the books those project became. Malcolm Daniel, the Gus and Lyndall Wortham Curator of Photography, and Sheikh worked together to select which works would go into the MFAH’s collection thanks to a generous grant from Jane P. Watkins.

    Art from Collaboration

    Entering the galleries of Homeland and Histories, viewers will perhaps feel a great intimacy and immediacy with the faces and places captured as mostly black-and-white images, even though sometimes those people, towns and landscapes reside or lie halfway across the globe. From Afghani children born in exile to Indian widows in the midst of worship to aerial landscapes of the Negev Desert, the photographic artworks bring the viewer directly into the history and life story of the subject, whether that subject be human or an expanse of Earth.

    “My work is collaborative in nature,” said Sheikh recently during a media walkthrough look at the exhibition. “I never felt very comfortable with the notion of insinuating myself into a community and moving through to photograph. But rather, to do something in a collaborative spirit felt much more comfortable and helped greatly to inform the process of rendering.”

    Though he was born and raised in New York, some of Sheikh’s work springs from his familial connections to Kenya, his father’s homeland and northern India, now Pakistan, where his paternal grandfather was born.

    “Most of my work is actually about trying to reconcile the duality within me, mixed in my DNA,” he explained of some of his earlier photographic journeys into Kenya, South Africa and later Pakistan. But Sheikh soon moved beyond these direct ancestral ties to an exploration of other kinds of border crossings.

    “I have to find a way to reach across different barriers, whether they be nations, religions, or genders. I think that kind of thread is something I’ve explored through all of these projects.”

    Throughout his career, beginning decades ago while still in college, Sheikh has traveled the world not just to photograph isolated communities and even refugee camps, but to take testimony and hear the life stories of the people he meets through his art.

    Faces of the World

    The exhibition includes pieces from several of the major series he created during the last 20 years. These works, shown together within the Cameron Foundation Gallery in the Beck Building, include: The Victor Weeps, photographs taken of Afghan refugee communities in northwestern Pakistan; Moksha, photos taken within the holy Indian city of Vrindavan of the widow communities that reside there in prayerful devotion; and Erasure, a trilogy of projects he did “woven around this notion of the legacy of 48,” the Arab-Israeli war of 1948.

    With too many works to display in one gallery, Daniel also used the rotating photography selections from the museum’s collection, located in the lower Beck corridor, to feature some of Sheikh’s early pieces, including photos taken while he visited Somali, and Sudanese refugee camps in Kenya. 


    “The very simple mode in which I work of just asking permission goes a long way,” Sheikh says in describing how he first began his process of photographing by asking and then collaborating. “I’ve almost never been refused in that way. All of my work has been firstly about asking a community to collaborate, or even more properly said, to instruct the process of making.”

    “I found that the stronger images were those that I completely gave over instruction of the relationships within the frame to the sitters,” he explained when describing how he asked individuals and pairs to present their selves to the camera as they wanted.

    As part of that collaboration process, Sheikh also asked for the subject of the photographs to tell their own stories. Museumgoers can read those transcribed testimonies throughout the exhibition and also use their phones to hear Sheikh read some of those stories, even while they look onto the faces that gave those narratives to Sheikh.

    “I feel really proud to be able to share the work,” said Daniel of the exhibition as a whole. “For me one of the things that Fazal does so well is to take those big, abstract issue like refugees, or the Israel/Palestinian conflict and to bring it down to a human level.”

    Fazal Sheikh, Abshiro Aden Mohammed, Women’s Leader, Somali Refugee Camp, Dagahaley, Kenya, from the series A Camel for the Son, 2000, inkjet print, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

    Homelands and Histories: Photographs by Fazal Sheikh-Abshiro Aden Mohammed
    Photo by Fazal Sheikh
    Fazal Sheikh, Abshiro Aden Mohammed, Women’s Leader, Somali Refugee Camp, Dagahaley, Kenya, from the series A Camel for the Son, 2000, inkjet print, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
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    news/arts

    your attention please

    Houston Grand Opera names Rice alum James Gaffigan its next music director

    Tarra Gaines
    Nov 6, 2025 | 9:00 am
    ​Houston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director
    Photo by Claire McAdams
    Houston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director

    Opera lovers in the audience for the Houston Grand Opera’s magnificent season opening production of Porgy and Bess didn’t know it, but they were hearing HGO’s future. James Gaffigan, the acclaimed conductor of the performance will no longer be called an honored guest to the company and our city; instead, he’ll make the Wortham Center his new home.

    HGO announced on Thursday, November 6, that Gaffigan will serve as the fifth music director in its 70-year history, leading the company alongside general director and CEO Khori Dastoor. He replaces Patrick Summers, who announced last year that he would step down as artistic and music director at the end of the 2025-26 season.

    When Gaffigan begins his term as music director designate for the 2026-27 season and then assumes the full role of music director in the 2027-28 season, he won’t find Houston an unfamiliar landscape. Though originally from New York, Gaffigan once lived here while earning his master’s degree from the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University.

    After his time at Rice, he quickly rose to international superstardom in both symphonic and operatic circles. He has conducted some of the greatest orchestras around the country, including the New York Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, and many others. In Europe he has taken the podium at the London Symphony Orchestra, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Deutsches Symphonie Orchester Berlin, and more.

    In 2011, he made both his HGO and American operatic debut with the company’s production of The Marriage of Figaro. He has also become a very welcome guest conductor for national and international opera houses, including the Metropolitan Opera, Bayerische Staatsoper, Opéra National de Paris, Lyric Opera of Chicago, and more.

    For the past several years, he has made a home in Europe serving as the general music director of Komische Oper Berlin, and he recently completed his fourth and final season as music director of the Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía in Valencia, Spain.

    Even with such a strong global presence, this Rice Owl continues to migrate back to Houston, guest conducting the Houston Symphony several times. Last year, he lead the first-ever performance by the HGO Orchestra at the annual Eleanor McCollum Competition for Young Singers Concert of Arias.

    Gaffigan’s ties to Houston are so strong that back in 2011, CultureMap’s own society king and classical music expert, Joel Luks, pondered if Gaffigan might be an excellent candidate for Houston Symphony director upon Han Graf ’s retirement. Luks, who attended the Shepherd School at the same time as Gaffigan, lauded the maestro’s sense of musical timing, charisma, and spirit.

    \u200bHouston Grand Opera names James Gaffigan as next Music Director

    Photo by Claire McAdams

    Houston Grand Opera has named James Gaffigan as its next Music Director.

    “He seems to understand music-making in a macro level, presenting a cohesive interpretation, while allowing musicians freedom of expression,” described Luks, also noting Gaffigan’s ability to connect with musicians and audiences, alike.

    It turns out Luks’s prediction for a musical directorship for Gaffigan was only off by 14 years and about a theater district block, the distance from Jones Hall to the Wortham Center.

    “I always knew that the first post I would take in the United States as music director had to be the perfect fit,” Gaffigan said in a statement. “All the boxes needed to be ticked. As I considered which institution, which city, and which community aligned with my dreams and goals for an American institution, I found HGO to be my ideal partner. In my opinion, HGO is the most exciting opera company in the United States. It is rare to find such a healthy institution, with tremendous potential, and a solid foundation on which to build.”

    Gaffigan went on to reminisce that he has admired HGO since his early twenties.

    “When walking into the building, I get a sense of community and excitement for our art form and the importance it has in our lives. I feel the same from the people in the greater Houston area. Houstonians want great art. Under Khori Dastoor’s leadership, the company has flourished, and it has become clear to me that the sky is the limit. I can’t wait to return to this city and start our thrilling new chapter together.”

    Dastoor sings similar praises for Gaffigan.

    “To welcome James Gaffigan back to Houston, and to HGO, as our new music director represents the fulfillment of an ambitious dream,” stated Dastoor. “This fall, Houston audiences have had the incredible opportunity to witness his passion, electric energy, and mind-blowing artistry at the podium. I am overjoyed that today’s leading American conductor — who embodies a new generation of music-making at the highest level — has chosen to invest fully in this company. James was steeped in the art and culture of Houston on his way to finding phenomenal international success. His return is both a testament to our city and a reflection of HGO’s ascendance as a force in the global opera industry.”

    For those wanting to get a taste of that passion and energy Gaffigan will bring to his role as Houston Grand Opera music director, he conducts Porgy and Bess November 7 and 9.

    performing-artshouston grand operajames gaffigan
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