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Our
World: The Children of Oakland
November
30, 2000 - January 14, 2001
The
cultural and ethnic diversity of Oakland's youth is explored
in the photography exhibit Our World: The Children of Oakland,
on view at the Oakland Museum of California from Nov. 30,
2000 to Jan. 14, 2001. Children from a majority of the 66
ethnic groups in Oakland described as the most ethnically
diverse community in the United States are portrayed
in approximately 40 candid photographs by Marianne Thomas.
The children are shown engaging in everyday activities or
celebrating holidays traditional to their cultural group.
Admission to the exhibit, located in the education corridor
on the First Level of the museum, is free.
The
exhibit is a collaboration between the museum and InnerCity
Expressions, a youth graphic arts business run by Harbor House
Ministries, where teens are trained by volunteer professionals
in such skills as computer graphics, marketing, accounting,
printing, photography, interviewing and writing. For this
project, teens helped arrange the photo shoots, interviewed
the child subjects for the photographs' captions and shadowed
the professionals in their work. Teens who worked on the project
were Arnell Pleasants, Lai Saelee, Katie Khanthavong, Mercedes
Gibson and Takena Feazell.
Children
of Oakland photographer Marianne Thomas is a photo editor
for the San Francisco Chronicle and an instructor at the Academy
of Art College in San Francisco, California. An award-winning
photographer who has exhibited widely, Thomas holds a bachelor's
degree in journalism with a minor in Latin American Studies
from Syracuse University in New York.
"As
the project progressed," Thomas said, "it seemed
to me to be more than about diversity. What I noticed was
that no matter what the background of the children I was photographing,
they had such joyous spirits. I started to try to cover the
spectrum of the childhood experience as it unfolded for me
so that, as a unit, the photos made a statement about being
a child. This project shows the spirit of childhood."
Project
manager for the exhibit is Natalie Nelson, Art Program Coordinator
in the Education Department of the Oakland Museum of California.
She said, "I wanted to bring this exhibit to the Oakland
Museum because the photographs document the inner lives of
children in our community and the continuing role of celebrating
cultural and religious traditions in the family." The
exhibit coincides with the museum's annual family festival,
Winterfest, on Sunday, Dec. 3, 2000, which celebrates
winter holiday traditions from around the world.
Photographs
in the exhibit are included in the newly released book Our
World: The Children of Oakland, published by Harbor House
Ministries, Inc., and 12 of the photographs were featured
in a calendar Children of Oakland 2000. Proceeds from the
project will support InnerCity Expressions.
InnerCity
Expressions and the Children of Oakland project were
made possible by the generous support of the Wayne & Gladys
Valley Foundation, the Y&H Soda Foundation, the McCray Family
Foundation, Global Ministries of First Presbyterian Church
of Berkeley, Moraga Valley Presbyterian Church, Clorox Foundation
and individual supporters of Harbor House.
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