Notes on Agegnehu Engida from the Ethiopian Biographical
Research Center (EBRC) program, May 17, 2008, at the Warren M. Robbins Library,
National Museum of African Art, Washington, DC.
Janet Stanley
From the discussion
of the Ethiopian painter Agegnehu Engida, several questions and avenues for
research opened up.
Who is the sitter of
the Agegnehu Engida portrait of a woman weaving a basket? Some in the audience,
including Professor Chojnacki, doubt that the sitter is Empress Menen. On the
other hand, published source(s) have indicated that Agegnehu Engida painted
portraits of the royal family from photographs. This portrait may have been
painted from a photograph of a younger (even idealized) Menen. Comparison of photographs of Menen (especially a young Menen) with the
portrait show strong facial resemblance. The question remains open.
Another question is
whether Emperor Haile Selassie would have given a
portrait of a member of the royal family to visiting dignitaries. Some in
attendance thought that the Emperor would not have done so. It remains an open
question, although in the case of the James M. Landis portrait, he did so, in
1944. And supposedly, also to Dwight Eisenhower (according to the
present owners of the Landis portrait).
There is a need for a
catalogue raisonné to be compiled for
Agegnehu Engida, listing titles, dates, and providing provenance for each work.
There is also need for some of the facts of his life to be filled in or cleared
up. His years in Paris , while attending art school, need to
be investigated. Did he return in 1933 or was he summoned home in 1930 by Haile Selassie? What did Agegnehu do during the years of the Italian
occupation? This needs to be investigated. What precisely were the
circumstances surrounding his death? All indications are that the circumstances
were suspicious, but no facts are revealed.
The question of the
Parliamentary murals, which may now likely be in Rome , needs to be pursued.
Investigation needs to be done about his “Swiss wife,” who was in contact
with the son Girma Agegnehu Engida (not her child) born in 1948 after Agegnehu
Engida died in 1947.
Whom to interview?
The EBRC or some individual should compile a list of persons to be interviewed
about the artist. Kebedech has already (back in 1999) met with the son Girma
Agegnehu Engida, who is now living in Addis Ababa, following some years in Germany. The son is also a painter. He
certainly may have photographs and information and about his father and/or know
the whereabouts of other paintings.
The well-known
self-portrait of Agegnehu is an enticing object of study in and of itself. What
is the artist saying by presenting himself as an “artiste” with beret, Western
suite and tie, and moustache. The date of 1944 for this painting is
problematic.
The booklet of poetry
by Agegnehu Engida, published in 1935 (1928 by the Ethiopian calendar), contains illustrations, possibly by Agegnehu or by his
students. Professor Chojnacki has subsequently verified that two of the
drawings are signed by Agegnehu. The other illustrations are well-known
portraits of famous Ethiopian, taken from other sources). The poetry is
patriotic and nationalistic in theme and style, reflecting the mood of the
times in Ethiopia with the looming Italian threat.
Postscript:
Stan and I have
continued the conversation about Agegnehu Enigda and have already been able to
fill in some pieces of the puzzle - - on of which is that he died in a car
accident in March 1947 (which clears up the death date). I also
discovered that I actually have an artist’s file on the son, who goes by the
name Girma Agegnehu Engida (various spellings), born 1948.
We came across another
source that indicated that Agegnehu was summoned home in 1930 by the Emperor
(not 1933 as earlier sources suggested).
And we found a 1938
reference stating that the parliamentary murals were already in the colonial
museum (presumably removed between May 1936 and December 1937 (or early 1938).