Exhibits Link to CDS home page. Link to CDS home page.
 
Photograph of Lyndhurst Gallery.Off-Site Exhibits
 
About
Events
Courses
Awards
Exhibits
Books
Projects

Learn more about the benefits of becoming a Friend of CDS
 


EXHIBITION HIGHLIGHTS CHILDREN’S RIGHTS IN SOUTH AFRICA

November 28, 2006–January 18, 2007
Children's Visions and Voices
African American Cultural Center Gallery, Witherspoon Center, North Carolina State University
Presented at NCSU in honor of Human Rights Day (December 10, 2006)

OPENING RECEPTION: Tuesday, November 28, 5–6:30 p.m.
African American Cultural Center Gallery

Children's Visions and Voices features photographs by Alex Fattal, a Lewis Hine Documentary Fellow in South Africa from February 2003 until August 2004, as well as photographs by the children with whom he worked. The Lewis Hine Documentary Fellows Program is a project of the Center for Documentary Studies (CDS) at Duke University. Each year, Lewis Hine Fellows are sent to placements domestically and abroad to work with local organizations to document social justice issues over the course of ten months. They then return to work with documentarians at CDS to further develop their projects.

Alex Fattal, in collaboration with the Children’s Rights Centre in South Africa, worked closely with children and communities across the country to develop a traveling exhibition titled Children's Visions and Voices: Rights and Realities in South Africa. This exhibit has made South Africans more aware of the multitude of complex issues facing children in their own country. (For an on-line viewing of some of this work, go to http://cds.aas.duke.edu/hine/fattal.html.)

The exhibition has traveled for two years to eleven venues across South Africa, from galleries to the Constitutional Court in Johannesburg to a health and population research institute in rural Kwa Zulu-Natal, and also to the United Nations in Geneva. More than 30,000 viewers have seen the exhibit. It continues to stimulate discussion about, and advocate for, children’s rights in South Africa.

“Alex Fattal is a young, talented social observer with a camera who has been welcomed into homes, schools, and neighborhoods across South Africa to document the lives of children. His photographs and writing—along with the words and images he elicited from children themselves—have helped South Africans to see beyond statistics and to understand the notion of children’s rights in a very human and personal way,” said Alex Harris, founder and creative director of the Hine Fellows Program and a professor a Duke University. “We present this exhibition in the U.S. as an example of extraordinary documentary work that shares stories powerfully recorded in South Africa in ways that will resonate with Americans, suggesting the numerous difficulties facing American children that have been overlooked or ignored in the past."

The production of this U.S. exhibition of Children's Visions and Voices is jointly supported by the Lewis Hine Documentary Fellows Program at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University and The Concilium on Southern Africa at Duke University. The exhibit at the African American Cultural Center is sponsored by the North Carolina State University Office for Diversity and African American Affairs.

The Lewis Hine Documentary Fellows Program is supported by the Bernard van Leer Foundation, the Philanthropic Initiative, and the Jennifer Jessica Cohen Foundation. Lewis Hine Fellows are selected each spring from a highly competitive pool of graduates of Duke University and of the Continuing Studies Certificate Program at the Center for Documentary Studies.





banner image:

Partial view of the Lyndhurst Gallery, one of four exhibition spaces at CDS. Photograph by Christopher Sims.


top



 


 
Home | About | Events | Courses | Awards | Exhibits | Books | Projects | Donate | Duke University
Contact Us | Sign Up for E-mail Newsletter | Press Center | Site Map | Terms of Use | CDS Web Site Trouble-Shooting Guide

All photographs, texts, videos, and other artwork appearing on this Web site are copyright by the artist.