Showing posts with label Setegn Atenaw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Setegn Atenaw. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 09, 2008

The 2nd Annual Artist for Charity



The 2nd Annual Artist for Charity (AFC) Holiday Benefit event took place on Friday December 5, 2008.

The main organizer of the event, Abezash, mentioned, “the benefit raised over $10,000 dollars.” AFC cares for 16 children HIV positive children and orphans.

The event was sponsors by Blen GraFix, Custom Signs Today and Touchstone Gallery. Many volunteers also supported the event.

Musical performers were PS24 and the special guests were the legendary Maritu Legesse and Setegn Atenaw (the Ethiopian Jimmy Hendrix). Setegn created praising lyrics for Abezash on the spot, freestyle. The event was very successful and brought people together for a good cause. Everyone at the event made a pledged to support AFC even more for the next year 3rd AFC Holiday Benefit event.

Picture by Mike Endale



Monday, March 24, 2008

Setegn Atenaw




The legendary musician and Masinko player, Setegn Atenaw, performing at the Takoma Park Community center. Masinko is an Ethiopian string instrument. (Photo: Naomi Brookner)

By Mike Meno, The Gazette

The aromas of incense and freshly ground coffee filled the Takoma Park Community Center on Saturday, March 15th 2008. Takoma held the city’s first art exhibit to exclusively showcase local Ethiopian artists.

The exhibit, which will be on display throughout March, features the photography and paintings of four professionals, all originally from Ethiopia, as well as about a dozen Ethiopian students from Piney Branch Elementary School.

On the opening day, artist Matewos Legesse came dressed in a traditional white shirt, pants and shoes that he said would be worn to formal events in Ethiopia. Legesse contributed several paintings to the exhibit, many depicting women and apples painted in vivid colors.

‘‘The colors of Africa are so bright, very colorful,” said artist Debebe Tesfaye, whose paintings of Ethiopian market scenes also featured vibrant colors, which he said is a reflection of the dress and culture of the east African nation.

Photographer Andarge Asfaw, who came to the United States in 1972 and lives and works in Silver Spring, said he has traveled to five continents, but nothing compares to being able to capture images of his homeland.

Asfaw’s photos at the exhibit were from a trip back to Ethiopia he took in the 1990s and illustrated scenes that included wheat fields, mountains, churches and marketplaces.

One of Asfaw’s photographs showed an Ethiopian market built around a large tree with far-reaching branches — an image he says is very rare in Ethiopia these days. He said he is trying to use art as a way to alleviate the problem of deforestation, and profits from his recent book will go toward the county-based nonprofit group Trees for the Future.

Tebabu Assefa, a member of the Takoma Park Community Action Group, which co-sponsored the event, said he wanted to give the public a chance to see Ethiopian culture, but also allow local Ethiopians to embrace their own traditions.