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African body art inspires Ethiopian photograph­er to create images that are a riot of colour

▶ Aida Muluneh tells Alexandra Chaves how her photograph­s aim to break stereotypi­cal misconcept­ions of Africa

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The first thing you notice about Aida Muluneh’s photograph­s is colour. The reds, blues and yellows in her images – often portraits of African women – are stark and saturated, clearly chosen with a meticulous eye.

Muluneh’s visual style can be defined not only by her use of primary colours, which she sees as a logical step from the black-and-white photojourn­alism in her early career, but also by the precision of her compositio­ns.

Her subjects are always impeccably styled and particular­ly still, at times rigid, in their poses.

This month, she was in Sharjah to give a tour of the two-part exhibition Homebound: A Journey in Photograph­y, which traces her artistic developmen­t and is on view at the Sharjah Art Museum. Curated by Salah Hassan, it is presented by the Africa Institute as part of its year-long public programme on Ethiopia, launched last year.

The show includes Muluneh’s The World is 9, a conceptual photo series from 2016 that features women in settings both real and surreal. Some of them are navigating bare landscapes, while others appear suspended in the skies.

Inspired by traditiona­l body art from Africa, Muluneh paints the faces and bodies of her female subjects deep red or bright white, then contrasts these colours with the ones in their vibrant dresses.

The way she develops her ideas is somewhat metaphysic­al: “It’s almost like a divine order,” she says. “But you have to be open to accept it … It’s me inside that frame. It is an experience, a thought or a question I have.”

Anything could spark an idea, she says, a song or a word. Then she continues the process by sketching and envisionin­g her photograph­s.

“I’ve lived in different parts of the world, which also has an influence on my perspectiv­e of humanity,” she says. Muluneh had what she calls an “itinerant childhood”. Born in 1974, she left her home country of Ethiopia at a young age, spending time in Yemen and England before heading off to boarding school in Cyprus and eventually moving to Canada.

She completed her degree in film from Howard University in Washington before becoming a photojourn­alist.

In 2007, she returned to Ethiopia for good, deciding she wanted to make her mark in her homeland.

“Coming back has always been on my agenda. That was something that was put in me by my mother who always believed you have to go back to support your country.”

“It never made sense to not be in Ethiopia and have a conversati­on about Ethiopia or Africa. Coming back, it was, in a sense, relearning my culture, even though I grew up as an immigrant abroad and that culture was inside our home,” she says.

Muluneh describes this return as an “educationa­l process”, and she soon turned to conceptual photograph­y to explore ideas that she could not tackle in the more prescripti­ve confines of photojourn­alism.

Since then, her images, such as The 99 Series from 2013 and The Wolf You Feed from 2014, have had a more introspect­ive and philosophi­cal bent, considerin­g issues such as morality and identity with elements from African traditions and history. “The key thing for me is that I cannot deny my Ethiopian roots in my work,” she says.

Despite these references, however, Muluneh does away with stereotypi­cal portrayals of Africa and Africans. She casts off the convention­al signifiers with which we are familiar through mass media – whether it is dress or surroundin­gs. Instead, she builds her own fantastica­l world and renders her subjects in striking colours, while drawing from Ethiopian and other African influences.

It is part of what she tries to achieve with her work, including her current show in Sharjah. “I realised that there is very limited visibility of images of Africa, outside of the exotic, that are being exhibited in the Middle East,” she says. “That is linked to how the Middle East perceives Africans as well.” Her efforts towards representa­tion extends outside of her photograph­y. In 2010, she establishe­d Addis Foto Fest, which is the first internatio­nal photograph­y festival in East Africa and is the focus of the second part of the Homebound exhibition. Curated by the artist, the section features the work of photograph­ers who have participat­ed in the festival over

the past near-decade, showcasing the breadth and depth of talent across the African continent.

More recently, Muluneh turned her lens to environmen­tal issues. Last year, she worked with the charity WaterAid to produce her Water is Life series, addressing the issue of water scarcity in Africa. Once again, the artist turns away from the typical imagery usually employed by charities, one of hardship or struggle. She instead weaves a narrative that highlights the role of women in accessing and bringing water to their families. In her photograph­s, the women become sojourners carrying jerry cans – used in Africa to transport and store water – as they cross barren landscapes. Here, the story is not about their plight, but of their strength.

The artist says climate change remains the most pressing problem of our times. “We are at a crossroads. Let us forget about wars. Let us forget about ethnic fighting. Let us forget about all of it and look at the environmen­t. It’s quite a sad state that we are in. We are busy being distracted by politics, but the existence of humanity is really at a crossroads,” she says.

With a new project in the works, Muluneh says her focus will now be on filmmaking and on the power of the image to spur change and combat misinforma­tion, especially in her native country.

Her photograph­s about the environmen­t will also continue, she explains: “This is something that I will work on forever because there is an urgency to it.”

It’s almost like a divine order. It’s me inside that frame. It is an experience, a thought or a question I have

Homebound: A Journey in Photograph­y is at Sharjah Art Museum until Saturday, October 31, and is also online at www.theafricai­nstitute.org/aidamulune­h.php

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 ?? Photos Aida Muluneh ?? Images from Aida Muluneh’s many photo series. Clockwise from top left: ‘Part Seven’; ‘Denkinesh’; ‘City Life’; ‘Seed of the Soul’; ‘Both Sides’; ‘Strength in Honour’
Photos Aida Muluneh Images from Aida Muluneh’s many photo series. Clockwise from top left: ‘Part Seven’; ‘Denkinesh’; ‘City Life’; ‘Seed of the Soul’; ‘Both Sides’; ‘Strength in Honour’
 ??  ?? Aida Muluneh also works as a photojourn­alist
Aida Muluneh also works as a photojourn­alist

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