Abdi Osman: Labeeb

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© Abdi Osman

© Abdi Osman


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Labeeb is an intimate portrait of Sumaya, a Somali trans-woman. The project consists of large-scale color photographs. Some of the photographs are studio portraits where Sumaya sat for the artist; others depict Sumaya in her daily life. The photographs add texture and complexity to Osman’s attempt to engage with questions of gender, sexuality,

© Abdi Osman

© Abdi Osman

and culture. The also speak to the hybrid cultural expressions of Sumaya and other persons like her. These images place African-born trans-people directly within the traditions of their African/black cultural heritage.

While posing questions concerning gender, culture, and religion, the portraits examine how the body can move into new states of being. They are themselves “trans-ing” practices, crossing the traditional with the new all-in-one body. This work pushes back against claims made by some African leaders that there are no African queers in their countries. Osman’s work puts African/black trans-people on record. It questions how we understand the various roles bodies play or perform, and which bodies or genders are understood to perform them—in particular, assumptions we make about female, black, queer, and trans bodies.

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Biography

Abdi Osman is a Somali-Canadian multidisplinary artist whose work focuses on questions of black masculinity as it intersects with Muslim and queer identities. Osman’s video and photography work has been shown in Canada and internationally in both group and solo exhibitions. He holds an MFA in Documentary Media from Ryerson University, and a B.A. in African Studies from the University of Toronto.

Previous work has been supported by a grant from the Ontario Arts Council. His photographs are also in private collections and the Art Bank of the Canada Council for the Arts. Some of Osman’s work was in the year-long group show DiasporaArt: Strategy and Seduction by Canadian Artists from Culturally Diverse Communities at Rideau Hall. Abdi was a 2010 artist-in-resident at the McColl Centre for Visual Arts in Charlotte, North Carolina. In 2012, he was a fellow at The Interdisciplinary Center for Culture and Creativity (ICCC) at the University of Saskatchewan. During the summer of 2015, he will be a fellow at the University of Bayreuth in Germany.

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