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MIRAGE
Tewodros Hagos -
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Highlights and Collections
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In 2021 Tewodros Hagos received the second prize award from the Ethiopian Ministry of Culture following his award in 2017 of the prestigious “Chevalier of France’s Order of Arts and Letters” from the Culture and Communication Minister of France. Hagos has an upcoming show at Nitja Centre of Contemporary Art, Lillehammer, Norway.
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His works can be found in many public and private collections worldwide including the Kistefos Museum, Oslo (Norway); Collection Laurent Dumas (Paris); Collection Farida et Henri Seydoux (France); Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection (USA); Arthur Lewis Collection (USA); Easton Capital Collection (USA); Birchby Collection (USA) and the C.C.H. Pounder Collection (USA).
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 01, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 04, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 02, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 10, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 09, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 05, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 17, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 15, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 16, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 03, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 07, 2022
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Tewodros Hagos, MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 08, 2022
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While Hagos’ previous works focused on perilous sea crossings, this latest collection of paintings highlights a little recorded aspect of the migrants’ journey in which individuals and families are forced to walk for many miles in extreme weather conditions, with very limited resources. As a result, many pass away, undocumented, on the journey while those that make successful border crossings are often forced to change their identities - their names as well as their clothing and customs - in order to assimilate to a new culture. This overwhelming sense of loss is expressed both through the figures’ body language and the vast emptiness of the desert landscape. MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 05, for example, depicts a man looking down at a handful of sand as it runs through his fingers, connoting the passage of time and the fragility of human existence.
However, Hagos is keen to note that these are not works of tragedy, but rather a celebration of human strength and perseverance. Indeed, all of his figures, especially the women, possess a certain radiance and luminosity. They are dressed in brightly-coloured, patterned fabrics and headscarves while sunlight appears to almost shimmer off the surface of the canvas, enhancing both the beauty of the figures and the golden hues of the desert. At the same time, the intensity of the colours, the stillness of the portraits and the figures’ unwavering gaze create a slight air of the uncanny that unsettles our sense of perception
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Meanwhile, the landscape, although recognisable as a desert, is non-specific, relating less to a geographical location and more to a wider feeling of disorientation. Although the division of land and sky provides some sense of grounding, in works such as MIRAGE / crossing the desert / 10 the sand literally overwhelms the canvas, casting the figure in a strange liminal space from which there appears to be no escape.
In this sense, the concept of a mirage reflects less on the disappointed expectations of the migrants and more on the wider illusions which we, as individuals and communities, have created and perpetuated throughout history. What will it take, the artist seems to be asking, for the world to pay attention?
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Tewodros Hagos: Mirage
Past viewing_room