Description
This week on Arizona Illustrated: Learn about the history of frybread and its significance to Native communities; meet a photographer and a painter who are both creative and life partners; see how Om Shanti brings Bollywood dance and more to the Old Pueblo; and find out why a story about two bishops who gave up their church to help people experiencing homelessness won an Edward R. Murrow Award for Hard News.
The History of Frybread
To people of Native decent Frybread represents more than just a tasty dish. It represents the hardships their ancestors had to endure and how they thrived in the face of adversity, and that history can be felt in every bite.
Hand in Hand – An Artistic Journey
Joe and Laura are partners in both life and art — two creative spirits moving side by side through a shared landscape of imagination, vulnerability, and devotion. Joe is drawn to the language of photography, while Laura’s world unfolds through surreal and abstract painting and drawing. Alongside their individual practices, they create collaborative diptychs together: visual conversations born from trust, intuition, and years of shared experience. Neither began life imagining themselves as artists, yet art called to them with undeniable force, and they chose to follow that calling fully. Today, they breathe, dream, and live art together every day.
For Laura, drawing and painting are acts of emotional and spiritual revelation. Her work emerges from the subconscious — from memory, compassion, longing, and deep human connection. Honored by the University of Arizona at the Women’s Plaza of Honor for her contributions to the Tucson community through teaching, counseling, community building, and art-making, Laura moves through the world with rare generosity of spirit. She possesses the profound ability to love without conditions or boundaries, offering unwavering support to others regardless of their struggles or triumphs. Her art becomes an invitation: to feel deeply, to love selflessly, and to recognize the fragile beauty that exists within all people.
Joseph Labate’s artistic path began with digital photography at a time when many dismissed it as not being “real” photography — insisting that true photography required film, chemicals, and the darkroom. The criticism echoed the historical skepticism photography itself once faced as an artistic medium. Rather than retreating from those questions, Joe moved directly into them. He became fascinated by a central inquiry that still drives his work today: how can photography — a medium often perceived as mechanical or impersonal — become a vessel for deeply personal artistic expression? Through this pursuit, photography evolved into far more than image-making; it became the primary way he encounters and interprets the world around him. His work explores the intimate as well as the public, examining personal memory, social realities, and the emotional complexities woven into everyday life.
Om Shanti
Om Shanti Is the University of Arizona’s one of a kind dance team that combines classical Indian dances with a contemporary twist. This once small rag tag group of students looking for a sense of community has transformed into a nationally competing award-winning dance team.
MURROW WINNER - Redefining Religion
Matthew 25:34 believes that unhoused people deserve help, with no religious requirements. Bishops Bennett Burke and Celia Jose founded the organization after they realized their church service numbers were dwindling, as the needs in their communities continued to grow. They distribute community donations to homeless hotspots around the city, showing that many grassroots organizations help fill in the gaps that large aid organizations can’t address.