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Africa First

Dawit Abebe, Quo Vadis? 6, 2017

Dawit Abebe

Quo Vadis? 6, 2017
Acrylic and collage on canvas
200 x 140 cm
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“Quo Vadis?” Series: As technologies advance and develop to bigger and better levels of sophistication, Abebe’s interest has lain in the impact these technologies have not only on the environment,...
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“Quo Vadis?” Series:
As technologies advance and develop to bigger and better levels of sophistication, Abebe’s interest has lain in the impact these technologies have not only on the environment, but also on human behaviour. His large, colourful paintings have become recognisable for their iconic figures, painted in thick impasto with impressionist overtones, their backs turned to the viewer. These backs often carry on them the weight not just of personal, individual histories, but of collective history.

Quo Vadis? marks a departure as much as it does a continuation. With its nod to previous series such as Background (2014), it turns its focus to environmental issues. Magnified insects hover around human torsos, symbolising all that nature represents in addition to man. “My current work is about the destruction and extinction of living organisms (whether small or big) in the name of modern life, peace and prosperity,” explains Abebe. He investigates disconnection and the ever- widening gap between man and our natural habitat. “Quo Vadis? is, above all, about a loss of equilibrium, deriving from sterilising and at the same time polluting mother earth,” he says. “Man creates his own tragedy by systematically divorcing himself from nature.” These works continue Abebe’s signature use of layering old school exercise books beneath acrylic paint to create a textured background. Recurrent elements such as car plates, archival letters and shadows symbolise man’s values and actions. Previously, Abebe has explored the ways in which rural communities (such as Ethiopia, Madagascar or Kenya) have been affected by advances in technology – predominantly as a signifier of wealth – and, in turn, the way it has impacted on behaviour. Ethiopia, like many developing countries, has struggled with the impact of technology and modernisation and its place within a long and rich local heritage and culture. It is the demarcation at which the two meet that interests Abebe. “The background, the past, always inflicts the present,” he explains. “I am looking at how the essences of the present anticipate the future and how all such trajectories locate our existence in the world.”
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Provenance

Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, Wandsworth, England 2017

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