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Red Room

Ficre Ghebreyesus

Red Room

2001-2006

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Ficre Ghebreyesus

Red Room

2001-2006

Physical Qualities Acrylic on canvas, 84 × 72 in. (213.4 × 182.9 cm.)
Credit Line Purchase with exchange funds from the Pearlstone Family Fund and partial gift of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Object Number 2021.15
Ficre Ghebreyesus’ Red Room pulses with what the artist called “the polyrhythms of the African diaspora.” This composition unites distinct art historical traditions from across the continent and reflects his exile from—and longing for—his homeland. In his youth, Ghebreyesus fought for Eritrean independence before fleeing the country as a teenager. His path, which took him through Sudan, Italy, and Germany, ultimately led him to the United States and to art school. Ghebreyesus drew inspiration and connection from the historic African artworks he saw in museums, and they appear frequently in his paintings. Here, a Yorùbá staff to the god Sàngó and a Benin Kingdom equestrian figure are set against a background of luscious red, a color rich in meaning for several African states and societies.
Kevin Tervala, The Baltimore Museum of Art, “African Art Collection Installation,” March 8, 2022 to Present.

Christopher Bedford, Asma Naeem, and Katy Siegel, The Baltimore Museum of Art, “Now is the Time: Recent Acquisitions to the Contemporary Collection,” May 2, 2021 to July 18, 2021.
“A Long View of History.” In BMA Today, Fall 2022, p. 19. [https://stories.artbma.org/a-long-view-of-history/]

Artist

Ficre Ghebreyesus

1961–2011

born Asmara, Eritrea 1962; died Hamden, CT 2012
Meet Ficre Ghebreyesus

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