THREE YEARS
FILLING A CHURCH WITH BIBLICAL BOUNTY
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru
Stepping
barefoot into the Ethiopian Orthodox Christian Church in Kileleshwa is like
wandering into a medieval wonderland filled with brightly-painted icons of
Ethiopian saints and prophets as well as Scriptural stories from both the Old
and New Testaments.
There are
‘signs and wonders’ everywhere. All painted in dazzling colors, one can see
Biblical scenes covering every wall, from the vaulted ceilings to the carpeted
tile floors.
“I still
have one more row of paintings to put up,” she says, referring to the lower
back wall. “I’ll be happy to show you them,” she says as she quickly
disappears.
“I’m almost
done,” says this 36-year-old artist (who could pass for 22) who adds that she
has been painting at the church for the past three years.
Once she’s
done, she plans to return to her own studio where she’ll be preparing for her
first solo exhibition which she hopes to have at Nairobi National Museum.
“Lydia
[Galavu, curator of NNM’s creativity gallery] came here to see my work at the
church, and said she’d like me to have an exhibition
Born and bought up in the Orthodox Ethiopian church in Addis Ababa, Emebet clearly studied her Bible well since the Pastor left her to the broad strokes of her original outline of what she planned to paint in acrylics on canvas to cover his church’s walls. It is her imaginative interpretation of the life, crucifixion, and ascension of Jesus that one can see cover the long wall that your eyes rest upon as you walk (barefooted) into the church and gaze straight ahead. There one sees panel by panel, the birth of the baby, the baptism of Jesus, with his numerous instances of healing scattered all around the walls. We also see him on a donkey entering into Jerusalem where he will eventually attend his Last Supper, a dramatic event that covers more than half the back wall in a modified Leonardo style. Jesus’ ascension takes place above that evening meal with him being accompanied by winged angels.
And beneath the disciples and Jesus are a long line of Ethiopian prophets and saints who Emebet cannot enumerate for me, but there are clearly many. What is equally amazing about her paintings is that the subject matter ranges between both the Old and New Testaments. She features Shadrack, Meshack, and Abednego together with a ‘fourth man’, a larger than life ‘son of God’ who’d been sent to save the three. She doesn’t forget Moses who has a staff in hand that has a snake’s head at the top of the rod. And she even has a panel devoted to Saint George slaying the dragon, even though George doesn’t actually figure anywhere in the Bible. He’s said to have pre-Christian origins but gained legendary status during the Crusades. Side by side of George, she painted a panel of the angel Michael who did battle against another dragon on the babe’s behalf in the book of Revelation.
And in
addition to her painting several images of Mary and the baby Jesus, Emebet has
also created one panel devoted solely to Mary where she is surrounded by
several angels, suggestive of how pure her soul and spirit had to be in order
for her to give birth to the babe understood to be the son of God.
When she’s
done, I can’t be sure the church will welcome the publicity Emebet’s artistry
deserves. But if, one day the church gains UNESCO status, I won’t be surprised.
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