Projects & Exhibitions

The Everyday

Ayesha Khan

4 October 2024 | Minute read

Muslim women are a minority within a minority, being subjected to three levels of discrimination: being a woman, a Muslim woman, and a Muslim woman wearing clothing that identifies with the Muslim religion.

A woman wearing full kickboxing kit in a gym studio

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

A dentist at work - she sits behind her patient

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

Liberation for Muslim women has been measured by the degree to which their dress codes conform to standards acceptable in the West. Many Westerners have assumed that it is not the choice for some women to adopt a style of dress concurrent with their Islamic faith. This idea takes away the agency of individual Muslim women who chose to wear the hijab and modest clothing. In addition to such stereotyping, Islamic dress in the UK has also become negatively associated by some elements of the UK media with immigration concerns and terrorism. The association has changed from religious to political, and when a woman wears a hijab she becomes a visible Muslim and becomes a target for Islamophobia. The barriers in social integration have therefore been heightened by the choice to identify as Muslim.

A teacher stands in front of a whiteboard covered in notes

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

A woman stands in front of a microphone mid performance with her hands up in the air.

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

A woman plays football on a football field, she wears a full football kit.

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

By showing a different social representation, the images in this project create a dialogue within the Western community. The women featured agreed to be photographed in their work or leisure space as they were keen to overcome stereotypes and show how they integrate into society. The shoots also involved interviewing the women to personalise and amplify their experience, both for them and for the audience. The quotes selected speak directly to the audience, inviting them to question their assumptions.

A woman sits at a microphone in a recording studio

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

A chiropractor places her hands on her patient's back

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

An artist sits in front of her easel, working on her painting.

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan


 

A woman in her exercise clothes in a park

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

A woman sits on a sofa working on her embroidery

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan

A woman sits and lets another woman apply her makeup

KHAN, Ayesha, The Everyday © Ayesha Khan


Ayesha Khan is a Welsh photographer who uses her creative practice to tackle head-on the misrepresentation of Muslim women within the British media. As Ayesha’s background is half-Welsh and half-Pakistani, she understands each culture and the differences between them. She is also a Muslim who wears hijab, and as a result has been able to identify some key issues concerned with stereotyping and Islamophobia whilst growing up in the South Wales Valleys. A central theme within her photographic work is the depiction of powerful Muslim women, as a direct response to negative Muslim stereotypes as perceived in media imagery of all kinds.

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