Author: gourgourini

HONEY MOON, ALKIS’ PAPASTATHOPOULOS SHORT FILM @ Focus WiP 2023 OF CANNES FILM FESTIVAL

Honey Moon, the short film directed by Alkis Papastathopoulos – filmmaker and SNF ARTWORKS Moving Image Fellow (2019)  has been selected with other 6 projects worldwide to take part at the Focus WiP of Cannes Film Festival 2023.

The Focus WiP (Work in Progress) aims to highlight short films currently in production or post-production to key decision-makers, such as international festival programmers, distributors, institutions, producers and buyers.

FOCUS WIP PRESENTATION
Tuesday, May 23rd, 10:00am @Palais Stage
The pitch session Focus SCRIPT is followed by the presentation of the Focus WiP and one-to-one meetings.

Find below more information about the six chosen projects for this 2023 edition
https://cinemadedemain.festival-cannes.com/en/2023/focus-wip-2023/

 

“Persephone, the red carpet” Conceived & Realised By Collectif MASI (Madlen Anipsitaki, Simon Riedler)

Celebrated during Eleusis’ Mysteries, Persephone revives in the city as a red carpet unfolded and moved in the public space of the European Capital of Culture.

The antic myth of Persephone seeks to inspire contemporaries to heed the disturbed cycle of the seasons and our indefectible interdependence with earth. Embodied as a red carpet, Persephone becomes the city’s common ground to reflect on its present and envision its future.

The idea of rolling out a red carpet on the street, as a set-up for inhabitants to meet, eat, sing, play on it, in short, to make it their own, was born during the lockdown’s lack of places to be together. It will be realized during the well-named Festival Synoikoismos, mysteriously enchanting the everyday life throughout the city.

Persephone, the red carpet is a living sculpture shaped by the protagonists and the dynamics of each neighborhood. To the sound of Andreas Polyzogopoulos’ trumpet she will be led in
procession from a neighbourhood to the other by the inhabitants-artists. During these mysterious transitions different worlds meet…

The different stages of Persephone, the red carpet’s life will become the homonymous movie shot by Joshua Olsthoorn and the Collectif MASI.

The 28th of May 2023, at 18:00 pm on Plateia Eleftherias, the red carpet unfolds and evolves from an aristocratic symbol into a democratic one on a public stage where residents and artists create together, discovering that each of them is a Very Important Person and an artist at the same time. The red carpet first stage, in Plateia Eleftherias, is dedicated to the birth of the contemporary Persephone between the cement’s factory and the sea…

Opening: Sunday 28/05/2023 Birth of modern Persephone
18.00-19.00 Event for the start of the project in Canteen Square / Platform
The transitions of Persephone, the red carpet take place on the following dates:
Thursday 01/06/2023 Innocence (happiness, joy, naivety)
17.00-17.30 Canteen Square / Platform — Kanellopoulou 64-56
Monday 06/05/2023 Death
18.00-18.30 Railway lines
Friday 09/06/2023 Rebirth
18.00-18.30 Railway station — Youth Park
Tuesday 13/06/2023 Fertility
18.30-19.00 Youth Park — Nicomedia Street (Refugees)
Saturday 17/06/2023 Confrontation
18.00-18.30 Nikomedia Street (Refugees) — Agia Markella Square
Wednesday 21/06/2023 Connection of the lower and upper worlds
18.00-18.30 Agia Markella Square —Nikolaidou Street
Sunday 25/06/2023 Forever between two worlds
19.00-19.30 Nikolaidou Street — Ormos Vlychas

Each transition is followed by an event at the place of destination.
Contributors
Conceived & Realised By: Collectif MASI (Madlen Anipsitaki, Simon Riedler)
Documentary Creation & Direction: Joshua Olsthoorn
Music: Andreas Polyzogopoulos
Sound Engineer: Yiannis Antipas
Production Management: Goodheart Productions

WITH EARTH IN ΜIND → El Hadi Jazairy (Design Earth)

Three Geostories

El Hadi Jazairy talked about the use of speculative architectural and design practices as a way of communicating with the wider public the missing elements of Earth’s representations that could reveal key constituents regarding the climate crisis.

El Hadi Jazairy is an associate professor of architecture and the director of the master of urban design at the University of Michigan. He is founding partner of the practice DESIGN EARTH with Rania Ghosn. His research investigates aesthetic forms of environmental engagement to visualize how urban systems transform the Earth. DESIGN EARTH has exhibited widely in venues such as the US Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale, the Sharjah Biennial, the Times Museum in Guangzhou, the Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon. The work of DESIGN EARTH has been collected by the Museum of Modern Art. It has been awarded prizes internationally, including the Architectural League of New York’s Prize for Young Architects + Designers, Jacques Rougerie Foundation’s First Prize, and Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture Faculty Design Awards. El Hadi is co-author of Geostories: Another Architecture for the Environment (New York: Actar, 2018) and Geographies of Trash (New York: Actar, 2015). He is founding editor of New Geographies and editor-in-chief of NG 4: Scales of the Earth (Harvard GSD, 2010). His recent writings have been published in the Journal of Architectural Education, the Avery Review, Thresholds, Topos, Domus, Abitare, Pidgin, ARQ Magazine, Volume, Harvard Design Magazine, MONU, and San Rocco.

El Hadi Jazairy holds a Doctorate of Design from Harvard University, a Master of Architecture from Cornell University, and a Bachelor of Architecture from La Cambre in Brussels.

With Earth in Mind – a series of talks curated by Daphne Dragona

With Earth in Mind” featured art professionals whose work has been created with and for the Earth and its ecosystems, and with the aim of provoking discussions and raising awareness around environmental issues. The series of talks was curated and moderated by Daphne Dragona, independent curator and member of the 5th SNF Artist Fellowship Program Selection Committee.

4 FELLOWS @ ΤΗΕ ΕΧΗΙΒΙΤΙΟΝ “A Scattering of Salts” curated by Panos Giannikopoulos

The exhibition “A Scattering of Salts”, opening on May 26, 2023, presents works of painting, sculpture, video, performance, and dance at Deree – The American College of Greece. It brings the art collection of The American College of Greece into dialogue with contemporary artists from Greece and abroad.

The narrative thread traversing the exhibition stems from a photograph which is part of the art collection. The acclaimed American Poet James Merrill looks at the life mask of fellow poet Kimon Friar. Multiple references emerge from the petrified gaze. Projections of desire, the form of the Medusa, citations and comparisons, sedimentation, the nexus of life and death. Merrill’s last poetry collection1 of the same name lends the exhibition its title, imposing its underlying leitmotifs. The scattering of salts is a poetic invocation, binding and situating at the same time, a magic circle, a spell. The scattering of salts serves as a metaphor for the scattering of memories and the accumulation of time.

Merrill’s séance is proposed in “A Scattering of Salts” as an exhibition-making tool. The occult, spiritual communications the poet anecdotally held are playfully converted into a way of engaging with art history and reconstructing historical works. These uncanny conversations become a source of both poetic and spatial inspiration.

The invocation of magic helps us become aware of our preexisting metaphysical assumptions. As the range of the possible keeps shrinking, contemporary rituals try to move beyond prescribed rules and reach out to what cannot be captured in descriptive language. They reveal the relationship between artistic practice and the transcendental through the counter reflection of the “technical”2. Historical works surface alongside contemporary artists and erratic dance performances and occupy unexpected spaces, while lost works are re-animated or developed further, creating scattered connections.

Privileging scattering over organization, dispersion rather than systematic arrangement, the exhibition presents fragments of imagination dissolving into something else. Salts become a lens through which to contemplate the present and scattering emerges as a methodology, thus creating the illusion of symmetrical, kaleidoscopic patterns. Minerals and parts of our tissues facilitate the transmission of nerve impulses across the human body, crystallizing into precious materials, a process of becoming and unbecoming—prisms in a contingent flux which enable us to contemplate the past and the future.

Salts crystallize and dissolve; layers of calcium carbonate accrete to form a pearl, which in time is dropped back into the sea; molecules under heat and pressure are rearranged to form gemstones, and the same forces decrystallize marble to chalk3.

Participating artists: Yannis Bouteas, James Bridle, Eleni Christodoulou, Jimmie Durham, Nicole Economides, Evangelia Fouseki, Ioanna Gouma, Nikos Hadjikyriakos-Gkikas, Rowena Hughes, Theo Hios, Astrid Kokka, Bety Krňanská, Jack McConville, Irini Miga, Michael Michaelides, Raffaela Naldi Rossano, Kosmas Nikolaou, Aemilia Papaphilippou, Pavlos Nikolakopoulos, Malvina Panagiotidi, Rallou Panagiotou, Cezary Poniatowski, Chrysanne Stathacos, Takis, Lina Zedig

Performances by: Konstantina Barkouli, Ermira Goro

Architectural design: Anastasis Papadakis
Exhibition and ACG Art Collection Senior Manager: Ioanna Papapavlou
Curatorial assistants: Clio Georgiadis, Maria Kollia, Athina Lasithiotaki, Katerina Milesi,
Elena Pitsilka (Deree Art History Program students)
Graphic design: Athina Lasithiotaki, Katerina Milesi
Graphic Design Supervision: Marios Stamatis
Organized by the Frances Rich School of Fine and Performing Arts at Deree – The
American College of Greece as part of the Arts Festival 2023.
In collaboration and supported by the Art History, Graphic Design and Visual Arts
programs and ACG Art Collection.
Special thanks to the Dance Area for their contribution and collaboration.

About The American College of Greece
The American College of Greece (ACG) is a private, independent, non-profit educational organization founded in 1875 and the oldest and largest American-accredited educational institution in Europe. Today, ACG comprises three educational units: Pierce (secondary education), Deree (undergraduate and graduate programs) and Alba Graduate Business School. Faithful to its mission of providing equal access to high quality education, ACG supports its students through a €8 million financial aid program. Deree, its undergraduate and graduate division, offers 38 innovative programs of study, accredited by NECHE (New England Commission of Higher Education) and validated by the OU, 6 cooperative programs with Clarkson University, 58 minors, and 9 graduate programs in Communication, Psychology, Education and Data Science.

1 Merrill, James. A Scattering of Salts. Alfred A. Knopf, 1995.
2 Campagna, Federico. Technic and Magic: The Reconstruction of Reality. Bloomsbury Academic, 2019.
3 “A Scattering of Salts: Kaleidoscopic Innocence.” James Merrill: Knowing Innocence, Routledge, New York, 2007, p. 158.

*Nicole Economides, Kosmas Nikolaou, Malvina Panagiotidi and Konstantina Barkouli are SNF ARTWORKS Fellows. Panos Giannikopoulos is the Program Coordinator of ARTWORKS.

ARTWORKS SCREENINGS – 14 FELLOWS SCREENED THEIR FILMS

A 2-day film screening program was held at Iris Film Theater with the participation of 14 SNF ARTWORKS Moving Image Fellows who showed their films and engaged in profound conversations with film director and the event’s moderator, Menelaos Karamaghiolis. 🖤 Thumbs up to all our Fellows for their inspiring work and passion!

Participant Fellows: Yorgos Kolozis, Eleftheria Katsianou, Antonis Vallindras, Alexandros Chantzis, Danai Anagnostou, Spyros Skandalos, Leonidas Konstantarakos, Konstantinos Karaghiolis, Loukas Palaiokrasas, Alexandros Skouras, Nikos Ziogas, Georgia Bardi, Elia Kalogianni, Gabriel Tzafkas.

 

“Pool”: a performance of the exhibition “Scattering of Salts” by Kontantina Barkouli

Kontantina Barkouli’s dance performance, a new production for the exhibition, titled “Pool,” takes a reservoir for water as a point of departure, embodying notions of accumulation, stability, and the convergence of diverse elements within a shared space. In her response to the “Scattering of Salts” group show, Barkouli delves into the materiality of salt, evoking associations with idyllic summer scenes and moments of leisure. However, she deliberately selects the swimming pool as the central symbol for the physical evolution of her work, highlighting its role as a human-made container typically devoid of salt. A melodic song interweaves with the soundscape, accompanied by fragments of dialogue from the film “The Way We Were,” evoking an atmosphere of nostalgia while simultaneously challenging it. Exploring themes of memory, the past, and their processing, Barkouli incorporates salt as a defining space and movement material, with qualities of preservation and dissolution, also connected to pleasure—shaping the trajectory of motion. The spatial data, visual materials, architectural elements, and artworks coalesce, and become embodied. As the performance unfolds, a swimmer engages in warm-up exercises, setting the stage for what lies ahead.

Konstantina Barkouli (b. 1994, Athens) graduated from the National School of Dance in Athens and the American College of Greece (2021), where she acquired her BA in Communication and Film Studies with the support of a Harvey C. Krentzman scholarship. As a dancer, she has collaborated with many artists and dance companies. She has performed in several international festivals, including: International Contemporary Dance Festival of the Canary Islands, Athens Biennale, Aerowaves Festival, Athens & Epidaurus Festival, Fast Forward Festival, Ramallah Contemporary Dance Festival and Dance Days Chania. As part of her SNF ARTWORKS fellowship, she showcased her first solo work-in-progress titled ‘Nobody Wants Your Dance’.

More info about the exhibition

4 FELLOWS @ ΤΗΕ ΕΧΗΙΒΙΤΙΟΝ “A Scattering of Salts” curated by Panos Giannikopoulos

“Mythical Truths” A multidisciplinary intervention by Yorgos Maraziotis

‘Mythical Truths’, the site-specific artistic research that Yorgos Maraziotis is currently executing at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp, spans between archiving, social sculpture and institutional critique. Drawing on the understanding of space through embodied memories and over a methodology that includes story-telling, human relations and visual arts, Maraziotis provokes the canon of academic knowledge and envisions an alternative school model where decision making occurs on the authority of its own people.

During the autumn of 2022, students, professors, technicians, administrative personnel and others that constitute the Academy, were invited to share their everyday experiences while walking through and around the school buildings. Their narratives touch, among others, notions on apprenticeship, spatial agents, representation and identity structures, everyday-life joys and burdens. And they highlight the Academy as a unique and diverse community. The recorded stories have been edited according to personal narrative and literacy criteria into a written archive which upon its publication shall work as a portrait of the school in the 21st century.

Parts of the aforementioned archive gain momentum through their sculptural, design and sound translation in space. More specifically, from April to July 2023, selected oral narrations will be turned into language-based neon, metal and marble sculptures, printed matter and sound projections, and will be exhibited in numerous indoors and outdoors spaces of the Academy; the garden, the Orangerie, the Wintertuin, various halls, the Research Room and the Library. This way a polyphonic landscape will be created where personal truths blur with collective myths and shape the identity of the institution.

‘Mythical Truths’ stems from Maraziotis’ necessity to look into the school model as an educational, pedagogical and cultural ecosystem where his vision of sculpture and archiving can amplify or sustain its social diversity.

https://ap-arts.be/en/event/yorgos-maraziotis-mythical-truthsmaraziotis.com

Yorgos Maraziotis
Mythical Truths
A multidisciplinary intervention throughout the Royal Academy of Fine Arts
27 April – 7 July 2023

2 FELLOWS PARTICIPATE IN THE GROUP EXHIBITION “My Past is a Foreign Country” curated by AKIS KOKKINOS

DEO Projects in collaboration with Chios Ephorate of Antiquities presents My Past is a Foreign Country, a group large-scale exhibition presented between two historical monuments within Chios Castle, the Temenos* Hamidiye and the Ottoman Baths, both inherited by the Ottoman Empire. The exhibition invites twelve artists from Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, Iran, and Cyprus to reflect on the palimpsest histories of the island and examine borderland cultures, collective traumas, and forms of iasis**.

Eight of the twelve participating artists were commissioned to create new works for the exhibition drawing inspiration from the venues’ history, the island’s collective memory and the linkage between the Eastern Mediterranean peoples’ histories and the global community. Through eight in-situ new works, four existing works and a plurality of mediums –including sculptures, paintings, textiles, ceramics, installations, and photography– the invited artists touch upon the conflicted historical imaginations and the memory that they construct. Resisting geo-political anxieties, the artists form cross-cultural intimacies and highlight collective solidarity and kinship while strengthening forms of representation and inclusivity within the diverse social fabric of Chios.

The exhibition pays tribute to the monuments’ genealogy and explores historical incisions and connections with current socio-political events in the neighbouring regions of south-eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East. Temenos Hamidiye (or Mbairakli mosque) was rebuilt to honour the victims of the Chios earthquake of 1881 and its devastating effects, which heavily impacted the whole island, including the two exhibition venues. Inevitably the recent destructive earthquakes in Turkey and Syria create associations with the island’s past, by drawing connections between these natural disasters and their socio-political aftermaths. The exhibition highlights the enduring impact of such events on vulnerable communities across time and borders and offers a space for grief, mourning and reflection on the human condition which unites us all with the past, with each other and with the here and now; while at the same time it sheds light to the resilience of the human kind and the powerful story telling of local communities which enhances the narrative of the global community. On the other side, The Baths served as a site of cultural and social exchange and a place of cleansing in the lives of Chios Castle’s inhabitants during the Ottoman Empire. In the 20th century, both venues, the Baths and the Temenos, were used as sanctuary for refugees from Asia Minor during the exchange of populations. Today, the activation of the Eastern Mediterranean pathways, led to refugees being temporarily hosted in the Castle’s entrance located in a walking distance from the venues before settling in the hot spot facilities outside the city of Chios.

The exhibition borrows its title from the opening phrase: the past is a foreign country; they do things differently there, in the novel the Go-between by L.P. Hartley, published in 1953. The phrase has extensively been used in other publications, screenings, films, talks, music albums including Zeba Talkhani’s memoir on growing up in Saudi Arabia and her quest for freedom through education in India, Germany and England. The multiplicities of the title’s origin, and the specificity into the Chios context, provide new strands of meaning into how we deal with the past, the overlooked, and the forgotten.

*Temenos: From Ancient Greek τέμενος (témenos). A piece of ground surrounding or adjacent to a temple; a sacred enclosure or precinct.
Temenos in Greek is mostly used as a reference to a Mosque.

**Iasis: Originally from Ancient Greek ἴασις (íasis). A Latin word-forming element meaning “process” or “morbid condition”. Ancient Greek word for Healing.

My Past is a Foreign Country
Group exhibition
8 July – 28 August
Chios Castle, Chios (Chora), 82 100
Exhibition Venues: Temenos Hamidiye & Ottoman Baths

Participating artists:
Hera Büyüktaşcıyan (TR), Stelios Faitakis (GR), Nikomachi Karakostanoglou (GR), Avish Khebrehzadeh (IR/USA), Maro Michalakakos (GR), Petros Moris (GR), Dala Nasser (LB), Yorgos Petrou (CY), Aykan Safoğlu (TR/DE), Mounira al Solh (LB), Maria Tsagkari (GR), Abbas Zahedi (UK/IR)

Curated by Akis Kokkinos, Founder of DEO Projects.

Exhibition Venues’ Location: Temenos Hamidiye and Ottoman Baths, Chios Castle, Chios (Chora), 82 100, Greece
Opening hours
Ottoman Baths: daily 8:30 – 15:30 except for Tuesday
Temenos Hamidiye: daily 10:00 – 15:30 except for Tuesday

Free admission

Opening reception: 8 July, 18:30 – 21:00
Live performance on 8 July at 19:30 at the courtyard of the Ottoman Baths by DEO Commission Series artist, Saskia Calderón.

INFORMATION ABOUT THE EXHIBITION VENUES

Temenos Hamidiye or Mbairakli Mosque
The Hamidiye or Mbairakli Mosque was founded in 1892 as a tribute to the victims of the catastrophic earthquake of Chios in 1881. It is located in the centre of the Chios Castle and was built in the place of a Christian church. A Minaret used to stand at the west corner of the square building but unfortunately has not been restored. The current monument is a single-hall building, covered with a tile roof on the exterior, and a blind, timber-framed plastered dome on the interior. Inside the Mosque there is also a Mihrab indicating the direction of the Kaaba in Mecca towards which Muslims should face when praying. On the roof top there is the Crescent Moon symbolizing Islam. Above the entrance there is a marble Ottoman founding inscription. The Mosque has been declared a monument worthy of preservation and has been restored by the Ephorate of Antiquities of Chios in order to be used as a cultural space and to house cultural events. The DEO Projects exhibition is the first event to be hosted in the Mosque upon completion of restoration.

Ottoman Baths
The Ottoman Baths, the largest hammam in the Castle of Chios, are a living proof of the Ottoman occupation even though there are sources to testify to their existence even from the Byzantine Empire era. The great earthquake of 1881, however, caused a great damage in the largest part of the island including the Baths. At the left side of the venue there is the entrance, the welcoming area and the “changing rooms”. Next, the visitor faces the grand hall with the central dome, decorated with cornices and other elements emitting the glory of the Ottoman era. On the dome there are holes, through where the sun light comes in while there is a third room, where the water springs are to be found. Restoration brought to light about 800 coloured and decorated tiles. Since the completion of restoration, the Baths are open to the public as a monument.

DEO and its 2023 Summer Program have been generously supported by:
Major Donors: Stamos J. Fafalios, Theodore Fatsis & Maria Apodiacos, Yiannis Skoufalos & Maria Kalomenidou, Patron: Constantine & Christina Logothetis, Supporter: Irene Panagopoulos, Young Patrons: Tina Livanos, Constantin Pavleas and Eugenia Vandoros.
Complimentary support by Alex Haidas and Angelicoussis Foundation.

With the support of: OUTSET

Sponsors: THE FABULOUS GROUP

*Petros Moris and Maria Tsagkari are SNF ARTWORKS Fellows in visual arts. Akis Kokkinos is a curatorial SNF ARTWORKS Fellow.

Volcanic Identity: States of Eros | Solo Exhibition by Iria Vrettou

 The moment when the soul parts on itself in desire is conceived as a dilemma of body and senses.

— Anne Carson

 

“Volcanic Identity” is Iria Vrettou’s on-going research art project, which begins from the narrative grounds of a volcanic island to unfold between the real and the imaginary, the entanglement of various time modalities. While it draws from the attributes and nature of familiar volcanic islands, it deviates in terms of the lives that inhabit it. It constitutes a wild terrain of speculative fabulation where queer ecologies and more-than-human species erupt, mix, fl ow, melt, seethe, are being vaporized and dissevered, thus conjuring and altering unexpected forms of kinship.

In this work, volcanoes are not viewed as isolated geological formations, but as dynamic bodies, already and always present in myths of origins, catastrophic historical events and sociopolitical symbolisms. They are formative, lethal, shapeshifting entities, composed by chthonic and celestial elements, hidden materialities and yet-unexplored quantum natures. Entities which belong to the state that Karen Barad has described as “nature’s queer performativity.”

Iria Vrettou chooses to investigate this particular state, and by naming it “volcanic identity” she critically questions common understandings of identity, the limits of representation, the potential of performative, multisensorial thinking, the real possibility of a «metaphor,” i.e. the transportation of the self to the other.

In this first episode of the project, titled Volcanic Identity: States of Eros, the artist approaches the endlessly emerging and transforming nature of erotic love, its victorious, emphatic but not rigid, transgression of boundaries and intuitions.

In the performative, indomitable nature of the volcano, Vrettou’s work acknowledges similarities to Eros, born from the union of Chaos and Gaia. They are both states of a certain kinship, powers of annihilation and regeneration, energies of abundance and ambiguity, beautiful, terrible, feminine, refl ecting one another. With reference to Anne Carson’s work Eros the Bittersweet (Dallas, Dublin: Dalkey Archive Press, 2022) this exhibition invokes the mysterious links that express the volcanic identity as erotic identity; explosions, magma, heat and ashes, desert and fertility, iridescent colors and toxic gases, time warps, multifaceted expressions, plural reformulations beyond the human; the state where hybrid and chimeric bodies are possible, desire and pleasure are liberated from the capitalistic imaginary, its racist and colonial necropolitics.

The “demons,” the painted and animated bodies of this exhibition are otherworldly apparitions of tentacular reach, insurgent sexuality and symanimagenic complexity; untamable witnesses to this reality, sudden and true embodiments of a metaphor. These bodies haunt the exhibition space that is turned by Iria Vrettou into an odd diorama of a certain volcanic/erotic plot.

Painting, animation, soundscape and live performances flirt with the “subconscious state of the explosion” and tease the “deep time” of volcanic identity. Contradictions, ideas, intensions run along in a dizzying effervescence, towards the volcanic explosion, the release of the magma, the creation of the first ground. Upon this ground, geological formations are ever fluid. Everything is changing, all is ephemeral, ever suggestive even in its most terrifying, volcanic roar.

***
Volcanic Identity: States of Eros
Solo Exhibition by Iria Vrettou
Curated by: Vassiliki- Maria Plavou
Organized by: Sfigga 45
Duration: 9th – 18th of June 2023
Opening: 9th of June 20:00
Visiting Hours: 20:00 – 23:00 Monday to Sunday
Sound Design and Sound Installation by Dimitris Kalamaras
Activities: Performative response to the work by invited artist Valinia Svoronou, June 18 @ 21:00.

*Iria Vrettou and Valinia Svoronou are SNF ARTWORKS Fellows

CLOSING PARTY | 5th SNF ARTIST FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM

Excited and absolutely grateful to all our Fellows 2022 who shared this past year with us, as well as their valuable time and unlimited talent. Some days ago, we celebrated the closure of the 5th SNF Artist Fellowship Program at Praxitelous bar! Thank you all for such an inspiring, heartwarming and engaging year! We are proud to see our community grow and our Fellows forming long-lasting relationships.

On to our next adventures 🌞

All photos by Pinelopi Gerasimou

“A Place Between a Teardrop and the Dancing Waves”

 

*Eva Anerrapsi is a visual arts SNF ARTWORKS Fellow (2022)

STUDIO VISITS

Part of the SNF Artist Fellowship Program is visiting our Fellows’ studio. During the visits, our Fellows welcome us to their working spaces and share insights about their work and future ideas. Studio visits are key components for our Fellowship Program as they allow skill-sharing and help our community bond.
Katerina Sarra, Vassilis Galanis, Marina Velisioti, Athina Koubarouli, Nicole Economides, Irene Ragusini, Ismene King, Marios Stamatis, Eva Anerrapsi, Natalia Manta, Anna Housiada, Danai Kriki, Eirini Tiniakou thank you all for the hospitality!

Faulty boy: Sam Albatros’ stand up & discussion with Patricia Barbeito

UCL’s Faculty of Brain Sciences is delighted to welcome Sam Albatros for a discussion of queer experience and their debut novel, faulty boy.

Sam Albatros (UCL PhD & best-selling author) will perform a stand-up number on being a queer artist, novelist & scientist. They will then be joined for a discussion by Patricia Felisa Barbeito (Professor of American Literatures), to talk about Sam’s novel faulty boy, the first novel in Greece to be written in the voice of a gender non-conforming character who comes of age in the early 2000s. The event marks the launch of faulty boy as audiobook (available at apple books, google play, audiobooks.com and libro.fm)

Sam Albatros is an academic at King’s College London, writer, poet, translator and an internationally-acclaimed performance artist based in London, with a strong social-media presence in the Greek-speaking world. Their work has been supported by prestigious writing residencies in Berlin (Literarisches Colloquium Berlin) and Leipzig (Goethe-Institut Thessaloniki, HALLE 14, Edit), and they have been the recipient of a Stavros Niarchos Foundation & Artworks Fellowship for young artists. Their debut novel faulty boy is currently translated into English and Spanish.

Patricia Felisa Barbeito has a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Harvard University, and is Professor of American Literatures at the Rhode Island School of Design and an acclaimed translator of Greek fiction and poetry. Her full-length translations include Menis Koumandareas’s Their Smell Makes Me Want to Cry (Birmingham Modern Greek Translations, 2004); Elias Maglinis’s The Interrogation (Birmingham Modern Greek Translations, 2013), which was short-listed for the 2014 Greek National Translation Award and granted the 2013 Modern Greek Studies Association’s Constantinides Memorial Translation Prize; Tatiana Averoff’s:Portrait of the Politician as a Young Man (Peter Lang, Byzantine and Neohellenic Studies, 2018);M. Karagatsis, The Great Chimera (Aiora, 2019); Amanda Michalopoulou’s God’s Wife (Dalkey Archive, 2019), which was short-listed for that year’s National Translation Award in the US. She is the recipient of a 2022 National Endowment for the Arts Translation Fellowship to translate M. Karagatsis’s Junkermann. Her translation of Christos Chomenidis’s Niki is forthcoming from the Other Press.

All welcome. The event will be followed by refreshments and an opportunity for further informal discussion.

Free tickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/faulty-boy-sam-albatros-stand-up-discussion-with-patricia-barbeito-tickets-652363836797

ΝΑΤALIA MANTA PARTICIPATES IN THE DANCE PERFORMANCE “painfully painless”

How does the body in pain move and communicate? Where are the boundaries between pain and pleasure in an era where the alternation between those two takes place instantly? The performance painfully painless seeks a sensory, pre-linguistic, unspeakable language, one that focuses on the mobility changes of a person in pain.

The ensemble approaches this subject matter through methods invented by humans for pain management, and develops the piece along two basis axes, one kinetic and one sonic. On the one hand, it focuses on the sensation of bodily pain. A body in pain moves in such a way as to always pursue and complete what is not there. It lives, organizes and regulates itself through memories from the time when it was “complete” and healthy. Its movement, presently elliptical, is realized every moment along with whatever is omitted. On the other hand, it guides us to listen to the particular language in which the phantom of pain expresses itself. Performers on the microphone recite mantras, words, instructions on pain management; they laugh, cry, breathe and everything is recorded, played back and gradually converted into audio frequencies. In this piece, the two aforementioned axes cross paths in multiple ways and instantly illuminate connections highlighting social, religious and cultural mandates on pain.

Let’s say: “a dance for pain”

dance research & choreography Androniki Marathaki • dance research & performance Elton Petri, Sofia Pouchtou, Despoina Sanida Krezia, Despoina Chatzipavlidou• dramaturgical contribution Steriani Tsintziloni• sound design | live electronics Jannis Anastasakis • sculptural installation | design & construction Natalia Manta • embedded systems Giorgos Roustas • lighting design Nysos Vasilopoulos • Costumes artwork: Frantzeska Mpoutsi • Light designer assistant Tzini Sakaloglou • artistic collaborator Eleni Mylona • collaborators Filippos Vasileiou, John Britton, Lida Diochnou, Mersianna Elefteriadou, Kostis Kallivretakis, Giorgos Sioras Deligiannis • developmental consultant Rallou Avramidou • production & management Delta-Pi • production Cloudsdonthaveshape • supporters of the dance practice “Let’s be comfortable in our own skin” Mykonos Biennale, Island Connect, Duncan Dance Research Centre, Unplugged Dance

Androniki Marathaki & Cloudsdonthaveshape
painfully painless
Piraeos B
1 – 3 July

A production of Cloudsdonthaveshape with the co-production of Athens Epidaurus Festival.

With the financial support of the Greek Ministry of Culture and Sports / With the support of NEON Organization for Culture and Development.

Within the platform grape – Greek Agora of Performance

More information and tickets: https://aefestival.gr/festival_events/epodyna-eykolo/?lang=en

Natalia Manta is a visual arts SNF ARTWORKS Fellow (2022)

“The Gravity Between Us” ΑΝd “Burst Forth” BY ANGELOS PAPADOPOULOS & ELPINIKI SARIPANIDOU

Angelos Papadopoulos and Elpiniki Saripanidou present their works in a double bill!

The Gravity Between Us & Burst Forth

– Thursday 22nd of June at 21.00
– Friday 23rd of June at 21.00
– Saturday 24th of June at 21.00

M54/54 Menandrou Street, Athens, Greece (entrance from the side, go down the alley)

The Gravity Between Us
‘The Gravity Between Us’ is a choreographic work for 2 performers. The piece has been created to explore the human desire to connect and looks at the complexity of what individuals do to see, hear and understand them. In this work, the dancers talk before they begin to dance, creating various contexts for reading their dance. Creative research and development began by exploring how gaze and the desire for reciprocity act as an initial catalyst for connection or rejection. Desire can be in one moment highly focused and singular to its goal and then become distracted, frustrated and re-motivated to find another target for its focus. This constant state of desire is often manifested through different ways of seeing and perceiving.

With the support of the Duncan Dance Research Center.
‘The Gravity Between Us’ has been presented at the Act International Festival for Emerging Performing Artists 2022, after Angelos Papadopoulos was awarded the Act Residency Award 2021 for his first choreographic duet presented at the Guggenheim Bilbao Museum.

Conception-choreography: Angelos Papadopoulos
Interpretation-co-creation: Danae Pazirgiannidi, Thanos Ragousis
Music: ECATI
Lighting design: Tzanos Mazis
Make-up: Emmanuel Kamakaris
Photography: Dimitra Tzanou
Acknowledgements: Sotiria Koutsopetrou, Steve Purcell and Elsa Siskou for their external look.

Burst Forth

A choreographic work for 1 performer. Burst Forth presents a meteoric space between inertia and action, placing a creature at the difficult point of transition.
Switched-on electrical appliances, animals grunting, objects breaking and disintegrating, harsh and sudden noises are sonicly and visually stimulating a somatic approach to feelings of discomfort, embarrassment and confusion. The performance space is treated as a dashboard with individual spaces that function as stages of transformation of the creature’s emotional state, forcing it into a process of displacement and self-confrontation. Burst Forth is an attempt to manage the constant mood shifts, from unbearable stagnation to the desire for action; A state in which the ultimate outburst seems necessary, even if it implies collapse.

Credits:
Conception-performance: Elpiniki Saripanidou
Sound design : Giorgos Stavridis , Giorgos Stenos-Frantzios, Elpiniki Saripanidou
Choreographer’s assistant: Alexandros Laskaratos
Prop design: Dionysis Kavallieratos
Lighting design: Tzanos Mazis
Photography: George Athanasiou, Dimitra Tzanou
poster design: George Athanasiou
Acknowledgements: Christina Skoutela, Pagona Mpoulmpasakou, Sophia-Danae Vorvila

 

The Gravity Between Us & Burst Forth
Angelos Papadopoulos & Elpiniki Saripanidou

– Thursday 22nd of June at 21.00
– Friday 23rd of June at 21.00
– Saturday 24th of June at 21.0

Entrance at the box office 12 €
The venue does not have POS.

Seat reservation is required online at the following links:
Thursday 22nd of June at 21.00
https://fienta.com/it-s-a-double-bill-angelos-elpiniki…
Friday 23rd of June at 21.00
https://fienta.com/it-s-a-double-bill-angelos-elpiniki…
Saturday 24th of June at 21.00
https://fienta.com/it-s-a-double-bill-angelos-elpiniki…

*Angelos Papadopoulos is SNF ARTWORKS Dance Fellow (2020)

“AIRPLANTS” A PERFORMANCE BY STELLA DIMITRAKOPOULOU

The performance is inspired by airplants in relation to the concept of uprooting. Airplants are rootless plants that absorb nutrients from the air and live off the humidity of the surrounding atmosphere without needing a specific soil to survive. The performance is dedicated to the uprooted individuals who have lost their roots and those who feel like buds withering before they can bloom because the trees that gave them life lacked roots. Combining movement and voice we explore themes such as loss, fragility, and resilience in adverse conditions.

AIRPLANTS
STELLA DIMITRAKOPOULOU

Thursday 29 July | 19:00
Saturday 1 July | 20:00
Isaiah Mansion, 65 Patission Str., Athens 104 33
Duration: 45 min. Entrance free.

Creation: Stella Dimitrakopoulou
Performers: Alexandra Serafimovich, Aimiliani Stavrianidou, Stella Dimitrakopoulou.
Outside eye: Elpida Orfanidou
Presented in the context of Back to Athens 10 International Art Meeting 2023 | Geometry of racional

http://stella-dimitrakopoulou.blogspot.com/

*Stella Dimitrakopoulou is a dance SNF ARTWORKS Fellow (2019)

Lito Kattou’s solo exhibition titled “LANDS/SexLife” curated by Ioanna Gerakidi

Ιoanna Gerakidi curates Lito Kattou’s solo exhibition titled “LANDS/SexLife” at the independent art space opbo studio, which opens at on Friday, June 30th at 8 pm.

In LANDS/SexLife, Kattou ponders and expands on the characteristics and symbolisms of the mantis as a species encountering life through survival, sex through shielding, resistance through cannibalism. Through a new body of work consisting of reliefs and other sculptural gestures, Kattou traces the circularity of time as an a-chronical structure, the fatality appended on the femme identity as a parable for protecting life and the landscape as a means for altering the dominant geopolitical narratives.

In LANDS/SexLife, the otherworldly, the uncanny, and the infinite are being mapped, inviting the audience to experience it as an act of seduction revealing other desires, sexes, successes, and safe spaces. In the exhibition opening, this parallel and unexplored universe will be activated through an ongoing performance that engages with Kattou’s reliefs, functioning as a mantra for the audience’s entry into the omniversal world.

Lito Kattou (Nicosia, 1990) is a visual artist based in Athens. Her works negotiate understandings of materiality and subjectivity through a composition of practices, spanning from digital fabrication to thermochemical elaborations. Her practice raises questions around the relationship between humans, animals, the environment and technology, symbiosis and alterity. Kattou is the recipient of the Ducato Prize 2019 and the New Positions Award for Art Cologne 2018 and she has been the invited artist at the Fonderia Battaglia, Fondation Thalie Brussels, Art Hub Copenhagen, PCAI Contemporary Art Initiative and 89 plus Google residencies. Recent solo shows have been presented at Fondazione Pomodoro, ICA Milano, TRANEN Copenhagen, Duarte Sequeira Gallery Braga, T293 Rome, Artothek Cologne, Benaki Museum Athens, Point Centre for Contemporary Art Nicosia. Among her activity she has participated in various group shows in museums, galleries and art spaces as at SAVVY Contemporary Berlin, the Onassis Foundation, in the Athens Biennale 7, the National Gallery Sofia, Culturgest Porto, Fidelidade Arte Lisbon, Ludwig Muzeum Budapest, Nottingham Contemporary, Kraupa- Tuskany Zeidler Berlin, Benaki Museum and Deste Foundation, Athens.
www.litokattou.com

Lito Kattou, “LANDS/SexLife”
Curated by Ioanna Gerakidi

Performance contributors:
Clothes: 2WO+1NE=2
Make up / hair styling: Sofia Kossada
Performers: Eleni Alexopoulou, Anna Anoussaki, Leda Dalla, Stavros Kastrinakis, Konstantina Barkouli, Rafael Sidiropoulos, Georgina Choleva
Info:
opbo studio, 86 Filonos Str., Piraeus, 18536
Exhibition opening: Friday, June 30, 2023, 20.00-22.00
Exhibition duration: June 30 – July 27, 2023
Visiting hours: Wednesday – Saturday, 12.00-20.00
Free entrance

*Ioanna Gerakidi and Konstantina Barkouli are SNF ARTWORKS Fellows

16 Fellows at the group exhibition “ENCORE: NEW GREEK PAINTING”

With the ambition to place painting at the center of the debate on contemporary art, highlighting the central issues that preoccupy contemporary painters and introducing the youngest of them to the wider Greek public, the exhibition “Encore: New Greek Painting” which takes place in Gallery of the Municipality of Athens with their editors Eleni Koukou, Christopher Marino and Theophilos Trampoulis organized by the Municipality of Athens/OPANDA, presents painters up to about 40 years of age and will last from June 24th to September 10th.

“Encore: New Greek Painting” features 33 painters based in Greece.While most of these artists are indeed under the age of forty, the term ‘new’ does not refer to the artists’age but rather to their painting language and the inherent qualities of their work.This exhibition adopts an interrogatory nature.Unlike typical exhibitions organised around a specific medium, our intention is not to imply any cultural superiority or aesthetic autonomy of painting. On the contrary, we aim to initiate a discussion by posing a series of questions that form the basis of our investigation.

Participant artists:

Ileana Arnaoutou, Konstantinos Giotis, Niki Gulema, Giorgos Gyzis, Eirini Efstathiou, Anestis Ioannou, Alexia Karavela, Stelios Karamanolis, Andreas Ragnar Kassapis, Panagiotis Kefalas, Kiki Kolibari, Giorgos Kontis, Karolina Krasouli, Aristeidis Lappas, Varvara Liakounakou, Aggelos Merges, Nikos Moschos, Eleni Bagaki, Anastasia Pavlou, Dimitris Rentoumis, David Sampethai, Katerina Sarra, Nicolas Simantarakis, Giorgos Stamkopoulos, Sofia Stevi, Antonis Stoantzikis, Anastasis Stratakis, Sasha Streshna, Antrea Tzourovits, Nikos Topalidis, Stella Tsoumatidou, Georgia Fabris, KEZ

 

ENCORE
New Greek Painting
Gallery of the Municipality of Athens
27 June – 10 September 2023
Curated by
Eleni Koukou, Christophoros Marino and Theophilos Trampoulis

Ileana Arnaoutou, Konstantinos Giotis, Niki Gulema, Eirini Efstathiou, Anestis Ioannou, Alexia Karavela, Andreas Ragnar Kassapis, Giorgos Kontis, Karolina Krasouli, Aristeidis Lappas,  Eleni Bagaki, Anastasia Pavlou, Katerina Sarra,  Sofia Stevi,  Sasha Streshna and Antrea Tzourovits are SNF ARTWORKS Fellows.

Sasha Streshna solo show “Devon Loch”

In her solo exhibition at Kalfayan Galleries, Sasha Streshna presents a new series of oil paintings which continues her research on western history painting tradition, focusing primarily on depictions of violence, repression and authority.

In her new series, Streshna references found images from soviet textbooks. While obscuring the evidence that would allow the viewer to recognise an event, Streshna converts the illustrations through a painting language that entails suggestive contours and a colour pallet with no apparent contrasts. Hence, the stories of rebellions are explored as incoherent and emotionally charged memories, rather than particular events.

The title of the exhibition “Devon Loch” refers to the name of a famous royal racehorse, which fell – for no apparent reason – on the final straight just as it was about to finish first in the 1956 UK Grand National. The phrase to do a Devon Loch is still used to explain a sudden, last-minute failure of someone who was expected to win.  Although, at first glance, the title suggests failure to comprehend and reshape the world of both painting and the political act, at the same time it also implies that insubordination is one of the most remarkable expressions of self-determination and free will. An incoherent memory, therefore, holds the potential to become a future possibility.

Sasha Streshna
Devon Loch
28 June – 16 September 2023
The opening will take place on Wednesday, 28 June 2023 (19.00 – 22.00)

KALFAYAN GALLERIES | ATHENS
11 Haritos Street
106 75 Kolonaki
Athens

GROUP EXHIBITION “ΔΕΚΑ” curated by Nicolas Vamvouklis

K-Gold Temporary Gallery celebrates its tenth anniversary in Lesvos in the summer of 2023, marking comprehensive artistic and educational programming in collaboration with re-nowned art professionals and institutions. This social experiment has been warmly em-braced by the local community and succeeded in bringing art closer to everyone while demonstrating how contemporary culture can catalyze the development of the Greek is-lands.

The exhibition ΔΕΚA, curated by Nicolas Vamvouklis, is developed as a screening pro-gram featuring representative works by some of the most acclaimed international visual art-ists and choreographers, who have experimented with video and film to capture the body in motion. In particular, the show explores performativity in the moving image by revisiting key themes that traverse previous events of the Gallery. Ideas around transformation, faith, care, gender identity, and travel are elaborated to create new meeting points through hybrid audiovisual narratives.

The selection of ten groundbreaking works from the 1970s to the present day immerses the viewer into a unique atmosphere of theatricality and rituals while celebrating the need to re-define human relationships in the here and now. The camera functions as a revolutionary tool for documenting immaterial and ephemeral artistic practices; it also highlights the body as a means of resistance and claim at the boundaries of art, politics, and activism. These approaches affirm that performance is an integral part of our everyday lives.

Beyond the screening program, the Gallery’s yard hosts a sound installation by American artist and composer Cory Arcangel, who has a strong interest in the technology of music and its impact on contemporary art. Based on house and techno riffs, his suite “24 Dances For The Electric Piano” was previously performed on a world tour that included The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Berliner Philharmonie.

The educational program of the exhibition is developed in collaboration with the experiential art space “Lefko Harti” in Mytilini. It features creative workshops by Mari Moustaizi and Mi-chael Meimaroglou. More information will be announced on social media.

Artists: Marina Abramović, Allora & Calzadilla, Cory Arcangel, Vanessa Beecroft, Mats Ek, William Forsythe, Liam Gillick & Gelatin, Maria Lassnig, Anna Maria Maiolino, Li Ran, Pipilotti Rist

*Νicolas Vamvouklis is SNF ARTWORKS Fellow (2021) in curating.

“ΔΕΚΑ”
K-Gold Temporary Gallery
10 years of contemporary art in Lesvos

21-30 July 2023

INFORMATION

21-30/07/2023
11:00-14:00 and 19:00-22:00
Free entrance

Exhibition opening: Friday 21 July, 20:00
The public space outside the Gallery is flooded with dynamic beats and traditional flavours at a party that bridges contemporary music with local gastronomy.

For the opening of the exhibition, there will be a free round-trip bus from Mytilini to K-Gold Temporary Gallery. Departure from the KTEL bus station (Friday 21 July at 19:00). Reservations: +30 6942202222.

Address: Agia Paraskevi, 81102, Lesvos, Greece
Telephone: +30 6942202222
Website: kgoldtemporarygallery.tumblr.com
E-mail: [email protected]
Social Media: @kgoldtemporarygallery

Κ-GOLD TEMPORARY GALLERY

K-Gold Temporary Gallery brings contemporary art and culture closer to everyone through exhibitions, performances, screenings, artist residency programs, educational activities, and publications. It is a founding member of the Mediterranean network MIRAMAR and collabo-rates with the Hellenic Ministry of Education and Religious Affairs.

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