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Samena Rana (1955- 1992)
Samena Rana: Photographer and disability activist
Samena Rana was a photographer and disability activist. Born
in 1955 in Lahore, Pakistan, she moved to England at the age of 9 to receive
hospital treatment after being injured in a car accident. She studied at the
Florence Treolar School and the College of Further Education at Coventry and
worked in Saudi Arabia as a translator after her A-levels. During her travels
in Pakistan in 1982, she became interested in photography and returned to
London to pursue a part-time photography course at the Sir John Cass School of
Arts. It was here that she experienced the problems facing many disabled
photographers - the lack of accessible darkrooms. Because the class was on the
second floor, she was told that her presence was a fire hazard and she
eventually left the course.
In the third image of Samena Rana's
Self-Portrait Series,
the tone of the portrait is more
sensual as Samena Rana wears a sheer painted shawl, black lace gloves and large
earrings.
View catalogue item
Self-portrait of Samena Rana, date
unknown
Her pursuit to find an accessible darkroom led her to SHAPE,
a photographer's studio in the Battersea Arts Centre, where she began
developing and printing her own black and white photographs. She fought to
improve accessibility for other disabled photographers and her advocacy led to
changes in policies both at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) and
Camerawork's darkroom in East London. Some of her professional commitments
included working as a freelance Disability Awareness Trainer with Interchange
and the London Disability Resource Team and she was also a Trustee of London
Artsline in Camden.
Engaging in disability issues through Samena Rana’s
art
Samena Rana tackled disability issues on both a personal and
public realm by reflecting artistically the ways in which she questioned and
referenced her disability and by questioning the restrictions placed on people
with disabilities by an able-bodied public. She accomplished this is many ways.
One example is the way she referred to the term "disability". As artist
Shaheen Merali
explains, Samena Rana marked the prefix "(dis)ability" to
challenge not only the way society perceives impairment but also to emphasise
and reclaim the term, "ability".
The following image is a part of Samena Rana's Reflection
Series. The first image of a wheelchair adorned with rich turquoise fabrics and
black gloves adds a sensual element to the notion of disability.
View catalogue item
Reflection Series Photograph, Date
Unknown
In addition, she documented various aspects of the disability
movement such as anti-telethon rallies and workshops with support from artists
such as Allan De Souza and Shaheen Merali. From 1989 onward, she shifted her
focus from disability activism to concentrate on photography.
Most of her artworks are constructed as series with
interconnecting themes and focus primarily on the self. She created probing
representations of themes as diverse as identity, childhood, memory, sexuality,
migration, beauty and disability, and family. Some of her compositions evoke a
strong sense of pleasure and danger and pose complex questions about personal
histories and self-identity as explained in the Out of India: Contemporary Art
of the South Asian Diaspora exhibition catalogue. Using an adjusted camera with
a triggering mechanism that could be placed in her mouth, she took photographs
which were often constructed on the bed, in a bathtub, or on the floor, with
materials such as dyes, water, jewellery, knives and textiles.
Her works have been exhibited both nationally in shows such
as Darshan at the Camerawork Gallery in 1986 and Disrupted Borders at the City
Gallery in Leicester in 1994 and internationally, at the Queens Museum of Art
in
Out of India: Contemporary Art of the South Asian
Diaspora,
in 1997-1998 and
Crown Jewels: Contemporary
British Asian Artists
in Germany. Her appreciation and knowledge of
Pakistani culture also influenced her works and she incorporated a variety of
material culture in her compositions.
The following image is an unfinished work by Samena Rana.
Rana intended to superimpose a transparency of her grandmother over an Urdu
poem she composed. We have photographed the transparency over the Urdu text to
demonstrate what the final image might have looked like. Rana passed away
during the completion of this series.
View catalogue item
Untitled Series, Image 3 , Date
Unknown
Samena Rana died on Monday, 14 September, 1992 in Stoke
Mandeville Hospital in Buckinghamshire. Her works are held at the Panchayat
Archive, University of Westminster.
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