After his return in 1954, he joined the
Ministry of Education and Fine Arts. In August 1957 under the patronage of the Emperor and with fundraising, he founded the Addis Ababa School of Art where he served as its director until 1975. It was the first formal
Art school in Ethiopia. He served as a committee member of the first annual ‘Ethiopian Students Arts and Crafts Exhibition' from 1958 where he was also a jury member. In his capacity as director he recruited Ethiopian art teachers returning from abroad, such as
Gebre Kristos Desta in 1962 and
Skunder Boghossian in 1966, both who left marks on Ethiopian art history. Ale Felege was a member of various art committees such as the Ethiopian Artists Club and the Ethiopian Artists Association, and helped to organize and participate in various art shows in and outside of Ethiopia. He took part in the 1961 exhibition ‘Contemporary Art of Ethiopia’ hosted in
Moscow, and he helped organize the 1967
Montreal show. He was renowned for his landscapes, portraits, and murals. He designed postage stamps, posters and flyers, paintings, illustrations for books and texts, and paintings that adorned churches across Ethiopia (notably the wall paintings in the
Holy Trinity Cathedral in Addis Ababa). In 2006 at age 82 Felege left Ethiopia for
Maryland, to decorate an
Ethiopian Orthodox Church == Legacy ==