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Wendimagegn Belete
1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair -
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Solo exhibitions include (Upcoming) Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, West Palm Beach, USA (2024); (Upcoming) 1-54, solo booth, with Kristin Hjellegjerde, London, UK (2023); Three Steps North, North Norwegian Artits Centre, Svolær (2023); National Museum, Addis Ababa (2022); Your Gaze Makes me: Wendimagegn Belete, Trøndlag Centre for Contemporary Art, Trondheim, Norway (2022); Codeswitch, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London, UK (2022); Your Gaze Makes Me, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, Berlin, Germany (2021); iodeposito, Traveso, Italy (2021); Tenthaus Oslo, NO (2021); Small projects, Tromso, NO (2021); National Museum, Addis Ababa, ET (2020); LNM Gallery/NO (2020); Oppland Kunstsenter, (2020); Moment 2.0, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, Nevlunghavn, Norway (2020); Revenant, Fotografiens Hus, NO (2019); ‘Moment’, ‘Andafta’, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London (2019); Frozen Memories, Østfold Kunstsenter, Fredrikstad/ NO (2018); “Are We There Yet?”, GALLERY SNERK, Tromsø Academy of Contemporary Art, NO (2017); ‘UNVEIL’, Tromsø Academy of Contemporary Art, NO (2016); NOSTALGIA, LeLa contemporary Art Gallery, Addis Ababa, ET (2015).
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Group exhibitions include HacerNoche, Biannual International, Oaxaca, Mexico (2022); 5th Biennale Internationale de Casablanca, Morocco (2022); Bangkok Biennial, Bangkok, Thailand (2022); I Call it Art, National Museum of Norway in Oslo (2022); Artsy Vanguard, Miami, USA (2021); the 6th edition of the Future Generation Art Prize, PinkchukArt-Centre, Kyiv, Ukraine (2021); Facing the Sun, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, Schloss Görne, Germany (2021); Sandefjord Kunstforenings Kunstpris, Norway (2021); The 5th Biennale Internationale de Casablanca, Morocco (2021); Mediterranea 19 Young Artists Biennale San Marino, Italy (2021); Flag Tromsø, Tromso kunstforening, Norway (2020); Oslo Kunstforening and Sparebankstiftelsen DNB exhibition, Norway (2019); YPN Digital Africa (Casablanca) 5th Biennale Internationale de Casablanca, MAR (2019); B#Side War festival, group exhibition in Venice/Treviso -IT (2019); Altering the past, FUSHION , at Youngs Oslo, NO (2019); Exhibition in Rådhusatelierene, No (2019); This man is your friend, RAM Gallery, NO (2019); Digital Africa Cameroonian photography and video art, Cameron (2019); Et maleri er et dik tuten ord, Akershus kunstsenter, NO (2019); LNM’s 50th anniversary, kunstnerneshus, NO (2018); Høstutstillingen/the autumn exhibition, kunstnerneshus, NO (2018); Young Invited, Gallery, LNM, NO (2018); The Process– Space, festival and exhibition, Russe, Bulgaria (2018); and Lofoten International Art Festival (LIAF), Mondo, Represent Mondo, NO (2017).
Highlights and Collections
Belete has been shortlisted for the 6th edition of the Future Generation Art Prize. His work can be found in prominent private and public collections such as National Museum Norway (Norway); Easton Capital/John Friedman Collection (USA); Bunker Artspace Museum (USA); Collection africanartfirst (Israel), Oslo municipality’s art Collection (Norway), The Holbar Collection (Liechtenstein) and The Norwegian Parliament Collection (Norway).
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In the exhibition, artist Wendimagegn Belete reimagines a selection of archive images captured in the eastern part of Africa in early 20th century, predominantly in Ethiopia. These archival materials, rich with historical significance, find new life through Belete’s work, emerging as large silkscreen paintings. The chosen motifs center around evocative Ethiopian portraits, thoughtfully interwoven with intricate technical drawings of camera equipment. This creative fusion invites viewers to contemplate the intricate relationship between photography, its purpose, and the complex interplay between subject and object within the vivid series of artworks.
Set against the backdrop of history, Belete embarks on a profound multidimensional dialogue that bridges the chasm between the past and present. Within this discourse, themes as diverse as colonial history, representation, modernity, materiality, and ownership are meticulously woven together on a single, cohesive canvas.
In 2015, Belete’s relocation to Tromsø, Norway marked a pivotal moment of transformation, symbolizing his departure from Ethiopia, where he had established himself as an active artist following his bachelor’s degree from Addis Ababa University. This monumental change spurred a profound examination of his personal history, intricately interwoven within a broader collective narrative spanning across epochs. The archives, rich with historical elements, offer an inexhaustible wellspring for exploring the realms of what once was, what is, and what the future may hold.
The exhibition presents a captivating amalgamation of silkscreen prints, acrylic paints, technical drawings of cameras, intricate patterns, and vivid colorization and the look towards history. This transition from the digital realm into a hands-on, tactile approach serves as a unifying thread that seamlessly weaves together a diverse array of visual elements into a singular, interconnected artwork.
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The photographic elements featured within the works date back to the colonial era, a time when they were used/misused as postcards, often distorting and sexualizing the individuals depicted. Belete reclaims these images, infusing them with deeper meaning through a process that involves manual, textual interventions, and physical engagement, thereby exploring the tactile possibilities of photography.
Moreover the work explores how camera has been historically employed as a potent tool for reinforcing stereotypes about the rest of the world. Through the lens of the camera, Western perspectives have often portrayed other cultures and regions in a simplistic and skewed manner, perpetuating preconceived notions and biases. This visual medium, at times, reduced diverse and multifaceted societies to a single, one-dimensional image. Such representations often omitted the complexities of culture, history, and identity, focusing instead on exoticizing or sensationalizing differences. This practice of using the camera to stereotype has contributed to the perpetuation of harmful misconceptions and power imbalances, emphasizing the need for more diverse and nuanced storytelling in photography and media to foster a more accurate and inclusive understanding of the world.
Furthermore, Belete’s exploration of the concept of decay in these aged celluloid photographs yields a visually captivating effect that serves as a metaphor for the erosion of power structures. These works provoke profound contemplation regarding the camera’s historical role in perpetuating stereotypes against specific communities and individuals. The exhibition, as a whole, invites viewers to reflect upon how we remember individuals and communities throughout history, emphasizing the pivotal role of archiving and documentation in shaping our collective historical consciousness.
The celluloid photographs featured in the exhibition can be seen as vessels containing desires and memories, preserved on a fragile, ephemeral medium susceptible to the ravages of time. Yet, beneath their fragile exteriors, lie our shared thoughts, dreams, and memories, destined for a renaissance in a new and enduring form. This body of work challenges us to confront the construction of social stereotypes, the perpetuation of systems of inclusion and exclusion, and the intricate interplay of memory and identity.
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Enquiry
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Wendimagegn Belete, Between Matter and Memory 1, 2023
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Wendimagegn Belete, Between Matter and Memory 10, 2023
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Wendimagegn Belete, Between Matter and Memory 11, 2023
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Wendimagegn Belete, Between Matter and Memory 12, 2023
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Wendimagegn Belete, Between Matter and Memory 13, 2023
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Wendimagegn Belete, Between Matter and Memory 14, 2023
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Wendimagegn Belete, Between Matter and Memory 2, 2023
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Wendimagegn Belete, Between Matter and Memory 3, 2023
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Wendimagegn Belete : 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair
Past viewing_room