Zerihun Yetmgeta


Zerihun Yetmgeta Yetmgeta is an Ethiopian artist. His paintings and mixed media pieces combine elements of contemporary art with traditional forms of his native Ethiopia, particularly from the icons and scrolls of Ethiopian Orthodox art.

Career

Yetmgeta artistic practice started at an early age. At fifteen he won first prize in a national art competition, known as the "All Ethiopian School" competition. After completing high school, he attended the Alle School of Fine Arts and Design in Addis Ababa. While attending the university, Yetmgeta shared a studio with Alexander Boghossian, known as Skunder Boghossian. Boghossian, along with Gebre Kristos Desta and Karl Heinz Hansen, have been cited as major influences in the artist’s development. Yetmgeta has taught at the Alle School of Fine Arts and Design since 1978.
In the aftermath of the 1974 Ethiopian Revolution, when the Emperor Haile Selassie was overthrown, many artists went into exile. The socialist military rule of the Provisional Military Administrative Council that followed, established repressive practices toward the arts, mandating the use of social realism and censoring subject matter. Yetmgeta, however, chose to stay in Addis Ababa. Since the end of Derg rule, Yetmgeta has enjoyed international prominence and has exhibited widely.
On 24 August 2019, the Ethiopian Cultural Garden, featuring Yetmgeta's original design in addition to a replication of his work "When the Sun Meets the Moon", was dedicated in Rockefeller Park in Cleveland, Ohio. It is the first cultural garden from the continent of Africa and it is believed to be the only monument to Ethiopia in the United States.

Themes

The sources of Yetmgeta’s various practices included imagery from Ethiopian Orthodox Coptic art and ancient rock art, see Ethiopian art. His works may include Amharic inscriptions and the visual allusion to prayer scrolls, icons, and altarpieces. He also creates work that relates to his connection to the African continent, pulling from imagery from ancient Egypt, West and Central African masks, and particularly traditional arts from Ghana. His celebration of his cultural roots can be found not only in his work, but also in his studio, which follows a floor plan of an Ethiopian church.
Yetmgeta works in a variety of media, including printmaking, painting, and mixed media pieces. The constructed pieces based in wooden reliefs may also include elements of parchment, bamboo, wax, and gold.

Awards

1st Prize, All Ethiopian School, Addis Ababa, 1958
Represented Ethiopia in the 4th Havana Biennial in 1991, themed: The Challenge of Colonization
Prix de la Biennale, Dakar Biennale, or Dak'Art ’92
2nd prize at the Kenya Art Panorama, French Cultural Center, Nairobi, 1994