Category Archives: News

Art Exhibitions to Commemorate the Ethiopian Millennium, Harlem

The inaugural show for Addis Heights millennium arts exhibition series featured 23-year-old Helina Metaferia, a U.S.-born Ethiopian-American artist from Washington, D.C.

Here are images from the opening hosted by Addis Heights Lidjoch Org. The project is sponsored by Tadias Magazine and Africalling.com.

Photos by Gideon Belete
City: Harlem, New York
Event Name: Opening of Addis Heights Millennium Art Exhibition Series
Featured Artist: Helina Metaferia
Show Title: Finding Womban – An Exploration of femininity through painting.
Host: Addis Heights Lidjoch Org.
Venue: OC West
Address: 11 Edward M. Morgan Place (157 & Broadway)
Date: Saturday, April 21, 2007

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Above: Featured Artist Helina Metaferia (left) and writer Andrea Bostan. Photo by Angelica.

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Above: Featured Artist Helina Metaferia (left) and Leah Abraha (right).

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Above: Leah Abraha

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Above: Enjoying spring weather outside OC West

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Above: Helina Metaferia and friend

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Above: Hilawe Girma

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Above: Adebola Osakwe, owner of OC.

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Above: Helina’s parents

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Above: Tizita Fekredengel

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Above: Helina’s parents

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Above: From left – Actor Freedome Bradley, Africalling’s Gideon Belete, and John

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Above: From left – Tizita , Liben Eabisa, and Eleni.

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Above: Joelle Dussek (Production & Events Consultant), on the back ground – Kidane Mariam (Ethio-Cuban Cinematographer)

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Above: Ayele

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Above: Esabel

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Above: Liben Eabisa and Helina Metaferia

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Above: From left – Freedome Bradley, Nemo Semret and Liben Eabisa

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Above: Helina Metaferia (left) and Leah Abraha

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Above: From left – Freedom Bradley, Gideon Belete, John and Nemo Semret

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Above: Part of the proceeds from the sale of the book Abyssinia of Today (Robert P. Skinner’s memoir, a narrative of the first American diplomatic mission to black Africa), helps to pay part of the production cost for the Millennium Art Exhibition Series.

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Above: Gideon Belete.

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Above: Kidane Mariam (Ethio-Cuban Cinematographer)

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Hot Shots From Aida Muluneh’s Photography Show at the Contemporary African Art Gallery in New York

Photos by Onye Anyanwu
Event Name: Ethiopian Light: Photographs by Aida Muluneh
City: New York
Venue: Contemporary African Art Gallery
Address: 330 West 108th St, #6 (at Riverside Dr.)
Hosts: Bill & Reese Karg
Date: Thursday Nov. 2, 2006

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Above – Left: Stylist/Designer Mobalji & friend, Middle: Attorney Nicole Coward (Consultant to Tadias), Liben Eabisa, and friend, Right: Photographer Andrew Dosunmu & Stylist/Designer Mobalji
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AboveLeft: Actor Freedome Bradley & Reese Karg, Middle: Africalling’s Gideon Belete, Attorney Nicole Coward & Reeses’ Mother, Right: Nemo (President of InvisibleHand Networks), Gideon, Nicole Coward & Reeses’ Mother
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Above – Left: Photographer Andrew Dosunmu, Casting Director Onye Anyanwu, Attorney Nicole Coward, Right: Gideon, & Reeses’ Mother

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Hot Shots from the West Coast

Photos by D.J. Fitsum
Event Name: Hollywood LeHabesha: Ethiopian New Years Party
City: Los Angeles, California
Music: Amharic, Hip Hop, Reggae, Old School and R&B
Date: September 9th, 2006

Email your hot shots to hotshots@tadias.com

Want some laugh? Read a poem about hot shots.

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Want some laugh? Click here to read Wogesha’s poem about hot shots.

Click here for events near your city or visit Liben’s Events List at www.libenslist.com

Hot Shots from Tadias Magazine 12th Issue Release Party @ Tsinoa Gallery in Harlem, New York

Above Left: Sirak Sabahat (Ethiopian-Israeli Actor), Middle: Liben Eabisa (Founder & Publisher of Tadias), Right: Mesfin Addi (Founder of Akukulu Academy)

Photos by Teseday Alehegn
Event Name: Tadias Magazine 12th Issue Release Party
City: Harlem, New York
Venue: Tsiona Gallery
Hosts: Linda & Yohannes with Tadias Magazine

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AboveLeft: Meron Tesfa Michael & friend, Tony Kassa, Henock Temesgen, Right: Mesfin Addi and friends

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AboveLeft: Mesfin Addi & Ernest McCaleb, Right: Fekade Mengistu & Henock Temesgen

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AboveLeft: Adam Saunders & Lydia Gobena, Middle: Italian Photographer Paulo Toby & friend, Right: Ethiopian-Israeli Actor Sirak Sabahat

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AboveLeft: Peggy Williams & Ernest McCaleb (Founder & CEO of Sheba Tej), Right: Nathan, Aster Yilma and Linda (Tsiona Gallery)

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Click here for events near your city or visit Liben’s Events List at www.libenslist.com

Hot Shots From the The 4th Annual Blen Art Show in Washington, D.C.

Above – Left: Blen II Catalogue contributors Robel Kassa,
Middle:
Salem Berhanu, Right: Blen Art Show Coordinator Ephrem M. Girma

Photos by Helina Metaferia
Event Name: The 4th Annual Blen Art Show
City: Washington, D.C.
Venue: Artful Gallery
Hosts: The Blen Team

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Left: Woodcut work by Abebe Zelelew participating from Dallas, Texas
Right:
Zena Tesfaye Teferra

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Left: Professor Achamyeleh Debela and his wife
Right: Azeb Mengestu (Member of The Blen Team)

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Left: Participating artist Meseret Desta
Right: Participating artist Mekbib Gebretsadik (Meseret Desta’s husband)

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Left: Masai Haileleul (Addis Art Gallery) and artist Solomon Asfaw
Right:
Robel Belete & Rahel Woldemariam

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Left: Painting by Martha Mangestu participating from Ethiopia
Right: Ruth Ayenew and participating artist Elsa Gebreyesus

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Click here for events near your city or visit Liben’s Events List at www.libenslist.com

Hot Shots from Habesha Relaxation Session – Harlem, New York

Photos by Sirak Getachew (D.J. Sirak)
Event Name: Habesha Relaxation Session
City: Harlem, New York
Venue: The Shrine
Address: 2272 Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. (B/N 133 & 134)
Hosts: D.J. Sirak & D.J. Birane
Music: Afro beat, World, Hip Hop, Reggae and New Groove
Date: Every other Saturday

Email your hot shots to hotshots@tadias.com

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Click here for events near your city or visit Liben’s Events List at www.libenslist.com

Addis Heights Millennium Arts Exhibition Series to be launched in Harlem, New York.

Above: Photo by Matthew E.

Helina Metaferia – This Issue’s Featured Artist

Born in Washington D.C. to Ethiopian parents, Helina Metaferia is a painter, a yogi and graphic artist. She attended Temple University’s Tyler School of Art and Morgan State University, where she obtained her BA in Fine Arts. She has exhibited her work at the Eubie Blake Cultural Center, the World Space Center, and the James Lewis Museum.

She is selected to appear as the first guest artist at the upcoming Addis Heights Millennium Arts Exhibition Series in Harlem, New York.

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Above: Free Womban, acrylic, pastel and charcoal on paper, 18” x 24”

Artist’s Statement:

The most sacred part of a woman is now reduced to a dirty word. What has once been celebrated and understood as a source of power and creativity is now being cut, abused, and condemned. Many women are taught to be ashamed and embarrassed of their own bodies, especially their wombs. A lack of emotional and spiritual connection to one’s womb is the basis for physical disease, painful or irregular menstruation, misplaced sexuality, poor self-esteem, and other imbalances.

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Above: Intuitive Womban, acrylic, pastel, and charcoal on paper 18” x 24”

The mixed media series, Finding Womban, is the visual depiction of women who are on a journey of liberation by healing and rejoicing in their own femininity. The striking and raw faces of women on a quest for soul identity are interwoven with rich subliminal backgrounds of abstracted wombs. The women in the paintings wear explorative expressions, each one seeking to reclaim a power beyond their gender and sexual nature. As the viewer searches for the abstracted wombs within the paintings, the viewer experiences a similar quest to the portrayed woman who, in turn, is searching for her own feminine essence.

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Above: Water Womban, acrylic, pastel, and charcoal on paper 25” x 35”

Creating these works of art has been a very vulnerable, intimate experience for me. I birthed each painting so I could begin the process of undoing negative conceptions, self-heal, and find strength in my own womanhood. Inspired by Queen Afua’s book Sacred Womban, Finding Womban is about a journey that each female must endure to feel whole and free.

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Above: Opening Womban, acrylic, pastel, and charcoal on paper 18” x 24”

Learn more about the artist at: metaartist.com
For details about Helina’s upcoming show, visit libenslist.com

Hot Shots: Photos From Rooftop Reggae Fridays in New York City

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This is an event organized by The Mic Goes Global (Bridging the Cultural Gap Through Music) – the brainchild of Ethiopian-born Sirak Getachew (D.J. Sirak) & his friend Bintou of Staka Productions. Arriving from Addis Ababa to the graffiti-filled streets of the Bronx, D.J. Sirak was introduced to the hip-hop phenomenon at an early age.

“I remember arriving at New York’s JFK airport at the age of nine and settling in a Bronx neighborhood. Being the only Ethiopian on the block and at school, it was hard to keep my own culture alive”, he says.

“As time went on, however, hip-hop became my means of bridging the cultural gap between myself and my new community.”

In the short time since the program began, it has gained recoginition from various media organizations including, MTV, The Source, The Village Voice, Tadias Magazine and local TV stations.

“Hip-hop has helped me fuse my past and my heritage with my present in an artistic and socially meaningful way”, he tells us. “Its time to get global!”

Click here to see photos from this and other events or visit Liben’s Events List at www.libenslist.com

Treasures of Ethiopian Art To Shine at Museum of Biblical Art

Above:Church, Mädhane Aläm at Mäjate, Ethiopia, 1892-1893; Private Collection, France, before 1973; Sam Fogg, London; Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore, 1998, by purchase.

New York, NY — The Museum of Biblical Art examines the exhilarating artistic heritage of one of the world’s oldest Christian kingdoms in Angels of Light: Ethiopian Art from the Walters Art Museum, opening Friday, March 23, 2007.

For the showing, towering metalwork crosses, brilliantly colored icon paintings, decorated manuscripts, and other rare objects have been drawn from one of the largest and finest collections of Ethiopian art outside of Addis Ababa—that of the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, Maryland.

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Angels of Light covers a vast sweep of time, from the 4th century, when Ezana, the King of Aksum, converted to Christianity, to the 19th century. Altogether, 44 masterworks speak to the manner in which Ethiopian artists infused their works with a unique sense of form and color, continually absorbing and transforming influences from other cultures.

“Ethiopia’s artistic heritage defies expectation, blending Semitic oral traditions and African colors and patterns with Italian narratives and Byzantine icon forms. I believe that many visitors will be amazed by what they see, from the hot yellow and red colors of the painted icons to the dramatic processional crosses, draped in fabric,” says Ena Heller, director of MOBIA.

Ethiopian culture has deep roots: the first Ethiopian emperor is even said to have been the son of the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon. According to tradition, it was he, Menelike, who brought the Ark of the Covenant to the country from Jerusalem, thus crowning Ethiopia as the new Israel.

“Today, too often we forget that Ethiopia was a world power, along with Rome and Persia, for much of the first millennium of the common era,” says Gary Vikan, Director and Curator of Medieval Art at the Walters Art Museum. “The Walters’ collection of Ethiopian art is a relatively new addition to the Museum—initiated only in 1993. Yet the power of these objects has already earned them an invaluable place in the story we tell of the cultures of Eastern Orthodoxy, alongside the Byzantine, Greek, and Russian cultures.”

By the 15th century, Ethiopia had developed a tradition of icon painting that rivaled the production of icons in Byzantium and Russia, and the new kind of painting emerging in Renaissance Italy. Representing this high point in the history of Ethiopian art in Angels of Light are nine rare panel paintings, diptychs, and triptychs, each representing a distinct style or iconology. One is a large tempera on panel called “Our Lady Mary with Her Beloved Son and Archangels Michael and Gabriel,” which is thought to have been created by a painter of the royal court between 1445 and 1480. The artist suggests an easy, human affection between Mary and Jesus in the way he depicts the pair locked in a rapt gaze and holding hands, encircled by folds of cloth. The choice of the Virgin and Child as a subject here, and the use of forms familiar from Byzantine or Italian models, confirm that Ethiopian artists were aware of Western traditions. Even more directly linked to the art of the Mediterranean is a triptych painted approximately 200 years later, depicting the Virgin and Child flanked by the archangels and scenes from the life of Christ, the apostles, Saint George, and Saints Honorius, Täklä Haymaont, and Ewostatewos. The central panel is based on a famous icon from the Roman basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore that was believed to have been painted by Saint Luke the Evangelist.

The illuminated books and scrolls in Angels of Light are especially powerful reminders of the passionate faith of medieval Christians in Africa. In particular, a pair of illuminated charts dating to the late 14th century or early 15th century bring to light an exercise of scholarship and devotion that seems mind-boggling in today’s “Google” age. On a single sheet of parchment, framed by classical arches surmounted by birds, the Canon Tables provided priests with an early cross-referencing system to reconcile the different accounts of Christ’s life. Also in this section of the exhibition is a 16th-century gospel book, in nearly pristine condition, which features full-page portraits of the Evangelists painted in bright bold color and an assured line.

Eight medieval bronze processional crosses will be stationed together in the MOBIA gallery, their varied geometric patterns offering a delight to the eye and mind. Meant to be seen against the sky or by candlelight, their abstract shapes are a hybrid of Byzantine and Islamic forms, incised, perforated, welded, and /or cast by master artisans. In one cross from the late 12th or early 13th century, the sign of Christ, as described in the Gospel of Matthew, can be made out in the curved abstracted form. Upon close inspection, 13 small crosses emerge from a seemingly unbroken weave of tiny interlocking circles in a 15th-century staff.

Ideally situated near the Red Sea, and encompassing one of the branches of the Nile river, Ethiopia was able to establish strong ties in both trade and religion with nations around the Mediterranean Sea. A prayer book with its worn leather satchel, a parchment scroll in its leather carrying case, folding icons (diptychs) and small books speak to the benefit of a portable gospel faith in a cosmopolitan center of trade.

Learn More at The Museum of Biblical Art