Fariha Tayyab is a multidisciplinary artist working at the intersection of art, journalism, and community building. Her storytelling revolves around identity, belonging, and social justice focusing on untold stories utilizing her creative writing and photojournalism. Fariha’s creative work has appeared in the Eater, Columbus Alive, Brown Girl Magazine, the Columbus anthology, Matter News, and numerous literary journals. She has led public and accessible art projects; the most recent include a QuaranZINE with OPAWL, a mural with Zora’s House, and abortion stories with Faith Choice Ohio. Fariha has held a variety of workshops on art as a form of social change with the University of Iowa’s International Writing Program, YWCA, Making Midwest fest, Girl Scouts National Convention, Thurber house, and others. She is a highly recommended teaching artist with the Ohio Arts Council, from whom she has received grant funding. Her projects and development have also been awarded grants from the Greater Columbus Arts Council, The Women’s Fund, Soze foundation, and others. Outside of her work in storytelling with public art projects as well as reporting, poetry, and photography, Fariha facilitates trainings with the city, local school districts, institutions, and nonprofits around the topics of leadership, violence, trauma and equity.