Between Yesterday and Tomorrow

This project is inspired by my country's history, our collective memories and my personal recollections. This is reflected through archives integrated with my present day works. Together, the images provide a glimpse into the meaning & make up of memory.

The act of remembering is the act of feeling. This exploration that merges three types of archives seeks to address the concept of an involuntary memory, one that’s of emotions and senses.

I read Ethiopia’s history as a child in my father’s books that he left before his passing. I learned about the glorious periods in Ethiopian history and lived in a society that celebrated having 3000 years of history and defeating colonization. Remembering is in our cultural DNA. We stand at an intersection between yearning for the past and longing for the future with profound uncertainty.

Images play an important role in this remembrance. Ethiopia’s visual representation starts in the 19th century with engravings, sketches and photographs made by European ‘travelers’.

I superimposed these archives with images from my current work and my family album. This acts as a metaphor for the overlapping and compression of time and space in one’s memory. On one hand, it ’s an acknowledgment of the continuous involvement of the western world in our history. Even our own historians favored European accounts in writing our stories and therefore, shaping our future. On the other, it speaks to the abundant nostalgia for the seemingly glorious past.

I recently made my first visit to the birthplace of my grandparents whom I didn’t get the chance to know well. It brought a fleet of memories, shifting from an initial longing for the presence of my ancestors to then a quick rush of melancholy for an uncertain future that awaits my generation and the generation of Ethiopians. Landscape is part of our heritage and it’s a reflection of a complex relationship between political, social and economical contexts shaping the history and memory of the people.

Therefore, my identity as an Ethiopian maintains an amorphous shape constantly shifting between elements of personal and collective memories. Identity photographs I took from my family album are superimposed on archival portraits of both Ethiopian monarchical rulers and everyday people from the past. The superimposition brings forward somewhat of a new being removed further from the original, speaking to not only the fluidity of memory but to the fluidity of identity in the present day as well.

The audience is encouraged to look at the images slowly, as if they navigate between the past and the future, hence staying a nomad in a dreamlike state, between yesterday and tomorrow.

© Maheder Haileselassie - The Seduction of Memory
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The Seduction of Memory

© Maheder Haileselassie - Image from the Between Yesterday and Tomorrow photography project
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Exploration. A landscape from my first visit to the birthplace of my grandparents superimposed on a far away landscape engraving from the 19th century.

© Maheder Haileselassie - Fluid identities II
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Fluid identities II

© Maheder Haileselassie - Fluid identities I
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Fluid identities I

© Maheder Haileselassie - Exploration I
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Exploration I

© Maheder Haileselassie - Fluid identities III
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Fluid identities III

© Maheder Haileselassie - Fluid identities I
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Fluid identities I

© Maheder Haileselassie - Reliving and reshaping memories. A 19th century palace in Ankober, now Ankober lodge.
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Reliving and reshaping memories. A 19th century palace in Ankober, now Ankober lodge.

© Maheder Haileselassie - Image from the Between Yesterday and Tomorrow photography project
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The statue of Emperor Menelik made in the memory of the victory of the Battle of Adwa where Ethiopians defeated fascist Italian army against colonialism in the 19th century.

© Maheder Haileselassie - Exploration III
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Exploration III

© Maheder Haileselassie - Shifting memories
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Shifting memories

© Maheder Haileselassie - Image from the Between Yesterday and Tomorrow photography project
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Nostalgia of the Red Sea I. Ethiopians have been trading on the red sea for centuries but we lost that privilege to Eritrea in 1992 following a bloody war. We have been a land locked country since then and the Red Sea and its stories remained a nostalgia.

© Maheder Haileselassie - Exploration V
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Exploration V

© Maheder Haileselassie - Fluid identities VI
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Fluid identities VI

© Maheder Haileselassie - Image from the Between Yesterday and Tomorrow photography project
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Nostalgia of the Red Sea II. Ethiopians have been trading on the red sea for centuries but we lost that privilege to Eritrea in 1992 following a bloody war. We have been a land locked country since then and the Red Sea & its stories remained a nostalgia.

© Maheder Haileselassie - Fluid identities IV
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Fluid identities IV

© Maheder Haileselassie - National memories II, Willful Remembrance
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National memories II, Willful Remembrance

© Maheder Haileselassie - Image from the Between Yesterday and Tomorrow photography project
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Inside ‘Fasil Gimb’ or the castle of Fasiledes, still standing today as a remembrance of the glory of Emperor Fasiledes and his successors.

© Maheder Haileselassie - Image from the Between Yesterday and Tomorrow photography project
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National memories III, Shifting identities. Axum Obelisks are a symbol of pride and, a testament to a 3000 years old history. However, during the recent war in Ethiopia, hundreds of residents of the town were brutally executed hence shifting our memories.

© Maheder Haileselassie - Exploration IV
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Exploration IV

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