Category: Fellows/Grantees

TIES TO PEOPLE, OF A CERTAIN INTENSITY @ Akwa Ibom

Akwa Ibom announces its inaugural exhibition ‘Ties to People, of a Certain Intensity’ which will be opened to the public Tuesday, December 3, at seven p.m. It will be an uncustomary group show featuring a new two-part film by Rosalind Nashashibi and six paintings by the newly minted NBA (Agency of New Way). NBA is currently Nick Bastis, Liudvikas Buklys, Gintaras Didžiapetris, Dalia Dūdenaitė, Ona Kvintaitė and Elena Narbutaitė working jointly. This is the second time their work will be shown publicly. Their first exhibition titled ‘Giant’ opened earlier this year at Kunstverein Langenhagen in Germany, consisting of two wall paintings.

Inspired by Ursula K. Le Guin’s ‘The Shobies’ Story’, which tells the tale of the first human crew to participate in a newly invented faster-than-light mode of space travel, the film considers how we can remain connected to others outside of linear time where language, and therefore communication too, break down. Following this disruption of the emotional life of the individuals that make up the film’s unlikely but fated group, the film inspires an evolved idea of love – “general love, not just personal love” as Elena says – that extends beyond desire into the terrain of a bond rooted in the cohabitation of time. Nashashibi consulted the ‘I Ching’, an ancient Chinese divination manual, at the start of the shooting and has used its response to shape the making of the film and to title both parts. The outcome is an atypical sci-fi film that feels a lot like collaborative auto-fiction.

Rosalind Nashashibi is a London-based artist working in film and painting. Recent solo shows include Witte de With in Rotterdam in 2018 and Vienna Secession and CAAC Seville in 2019. Nashashibi is currently artist in residence at the National Gallery, London. She was a Turner Prize nominee in 2017, and her work has been included in Documenta 14, Manifesta 7, the Nordic Triennial, and Sharjah 10, and she won the Beck’s Futures prize in 2003. She is a Senior Lecturer in Fine Art at Goldsmiths University and is part of the duo Nashashibi/Skaer with Lucy Skaer.

NBA (Agency of New Way) is a group which makes artworks and exhibitions. For this occasion, the paintings of NBA were made by Nick Bastis, Liudvikas Buklys, Gintaras Didžiapetris, Dalia Dūdenaitė, Ona Kvintaitė and Elena Narbutaitė.

Artists: Rosalind Nashashibi, NBA (Agency of New Way): Nick Bastis, Liudvikas Buklys, Gintaras Didžiapetris, Dalia Dūdenaitė, Ona Kvintaitė and Elena Narbutaitė

OPENING Tuesday, December 3, at seven p.m. On view December 11, 2019 – February 14, 2020

https://akwaibomathens.org/

Gone today, here tomorrow

Curation: Eva Vaslamatzi (Fellow 2019)
Artists: Maria Theodoraki, Marcos Lutyens, Basim Magdy, Kosmas Nikolaou (Fellow 2018), Malvina Panagiotidi (Fellow 2018)
Duration: 20.11.2019 – 26.01.2020
Megaron, Vas. Sofias Ave. & Kokkali St.

Hydroexpress Project – an initiative by Marina Papadaki (Fellow 2019)

Within a context of experimentation and with the initiative of SNF ARTWORKS Fellow 2019 Marina Papadaki, Hydroexpress Project, opened its doors at November 9th. It is a hybrid space that houses an artist, a plumber and carries the memories of five generations. Its name is borrowed from the plumber’s shop”Ydroexpres”.

Hydroexpress Project is an ongoing project, during which, the events that are going to take place will be accompanied each time by a publication for the purpose of archiving. It is a hybrid that emerged from entering a “readymade”, without encroaching it. It could historically become the continuation of a chronic evolutionary process. There will be no attempt to create a new context or a new state. It will work in reverse. Through intimacy and by deconstructing the identity of the place, it is going to talk about already existing contexts, attitudes, stereotypes, and explore institutions, norms, and socioeconomic patterns.

At the Hydroexpress’ first project the space opens its doors and invites two artists, Anestis Ioannou and Vangelis Savvas, and three curators –Danai Giannoglou (SNF ARTWORKS Fellow 2019), Myrto Katsimicha and Eleni Riga – to place themselves  among this hybrid environment and its own signifieds.

ARTISTS:
Anestis Ioannou
Vangelis Savvas

WRITERS:
Danai Giannoglou
Myrto Katsimicha
Eleni Riga

OPEN DAYS:
Sunday 10/11
Friday 15/11
Saturday 16/11 & Sunday 17/11
17:00 – 20:00
or by appointment

Overview Effect – Encountering the Cosmos

The exhibition Overview Effect: Encountering the Cosmos presented in the context of the 7th Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art, invites us to engage in an exciting and remarkably refreshing parallel reading of moving and still images alike.

The Overview Effect, thanks to which astronauts see the Earth as a borderless whole, our common home without differences – as well as the fears, the hopes, the utopia, the reality, and the disillusionment that arise from this – is the mortar that binds and constitutes the fourteen films of the International Competition Section of the 60th Thessaloniki International Film Festival.

These films were allocated to fourteen young Greek artists, each of whom undertook to comment on one of them and create an original work of art with absolute freedom and no restrictions as to materials, technique, and style. The only guideline they were given by the TIFF was to study the Overview Effect and view the films through its lens, activating the process of highlighting the non-visible.

5 SNF ARTWORKS Fellows take part in the exhibition: Despina Flessa (Fellow 2018), Panos Kompis (Fellow 2018), Manolis D. Lemos (Fellow 2018), Virginia Mastrogiannaki (Fellow 2019) , Pavlos Tsakonas (Fellow 2018)

Other participating artists are:
Christos Delidimos, Giorgos Gerontides, Zoe Hatziyannaki, Kalos- Klio, Irini Karayannopoulou,  Elias Mamaliogas, Konstantinos Patsios, Antigoni Tsagkaropoulou, Alexis Vasilikos

Curation: Orestis Andreadakis / Production & Coordination: Thanos Stavropoulos

FULBRIGHT POLYMORPHIA

The Fulbright Foundation and Fulbright Artists Alumni, in collaboration with i-D ProjectArt, invite you to support the Fulbright Scholarship Program by acquiring a work of art. All proceeds will benefit the Fulbright Scholarship Program. The “Art Supports Education – Fulbright Alumni Art Series” is an initiative that began in 2009. In recognition of the fundamental role of education, Fulbright artist alumni donate their works in support of the Fulbright Scholarship Program.

This year’s series, “Fulbright POLYMORPHIA”, aims to highlight the diversity (polymorphia) of expression that characterizes the contemporary visual art scene and the arts in general, an element that is firmly supported by the Fulbright Artist Program.

Three of are Fellows – Fotis Sagonas (2018), Alex Simopoulos (2018) ,  Antonis Theodoridis  (2019) – participate among other artists.

Curation: Evgenia Alexaki

Participating Artists:
Erieta Attali, Dora Economou, Efi Chalikopoulou, Leonidas Chalepas, Titina Chalmatzi, Sofia Dona, Fotis Flevotomos, Elias Kafouros, Pygmalion Karatzas, Diane Katsiaficas, Zoe Keramea, Apostolos Kilessopoulos, Sia Kyriakakos, Pelagia Kyriazi, Maria Letsiou, Ioannis Michalou(di)s, Eleni Mylonas, Dimitris Papaioannou + Marilena Stafylidou, Lambros Papanikolatos, Vangelis Pliarides, Loukia Richards, Fotis Sagonas, Alex Simopoulos, Georgios Taxidis, Antonis Theodoridis, Angeliki Chaido Tsoli, Giorgios Tzinoudis, Costas Varotsos, Nikolas Ventourakis, Adonis Volanakis, Kristina Williamson, Zafos Xagoraris, Yiorgis Yerolymbos, Sotos Zachariadis, Theodoros Zafeiropoulos

On view until December 7th, 2019

Playing Ground @ Automatic Transmission

Constantly present in contemporary culture, play due to its abrupt and unexpected nature has been put under manifold and -one could claim- inspired control mechanisms: absolute connection with infancy or idleness, educationally tooled to infuse common principles and behaviours. Ιn the 20th century, in the sake of the socially engaged communicational strategies, play has been used from arts institutions to propagate the inclusive cultural model. Participatory art practices, public programming built on the triptych of “play-create-learn” have functioned as attempts to orchestrate the notion of play and the playful practice of art into hegemonic narratives. Artists themselves, are invited to constrain their playful power of experimenting, creating, interacting with the material and the immaterial to pace with the prevalent art industry.

Irini Karayannopoulou, Anna Lascari, Irini Bachlitzanaki and Anastasia Pavlou (Fellow 2019) explore the possible ground of the element of play through various practices, media and gestures in the recently founded space of Automatic Transmission.

Curator: Christina Petkopoulou (Fellow 2019)

Into my garden come, Primarolia Festival 2019

Maria Tsagkari (Fellow 2019) presents her new video work Intimate letters at the exhibition Into my garden come in Aigio, Greece, a contemporary art show, part of the Primarolia Festival 2019.

Eight artists arrive in Aigio eager to start a new conversation with the place. Aigio, a town cradled between the sea and the high mountains holds a history that dates back to ancient times and offers a fertile ground of artistic creation and dialogue through a contemporary art exhibition. The exhibition focuses on the metaphorical concept of the garden. The title is taken from Emily Dickinson’s verse “Into my garden come!”, perceived as a meeting and gathering of senses, ingredients, objects, ideas – a point of conjunction, of matter and meaning, of past and future. This new sowing of people, ideas and meetings takes place in the coastal zone of Aigio, known as Vostizza during the Middle Ages, meaning the city of gardens, lending the famous name to the local currant variety PDO «VOSTIZZA».

Artists: Rob Kesseler, Agalis Manessi, Aggelos Antonopoulos, Luc Messinezis, Yiannis Brouzos, Maria Tsagkari, Kostas Pappas and Bill Psarras

Curator: Nansy Charitonidou

Counting Craters on the Moon

As a result of advances in machine learning, our understanding of today’s world is ever more mediated by machines. What challenges does deep learning bring to human-based knowledge? What do machines see and do differently than humans? How can artificial intelligence enhance new forms of experience and understanding?

To address these questions, in Counting Craters on the Moon, Kyriaki Goni purposely turns her gaze to a distant and uncanny territory: the Moon and its surface. The Moon, according to the artist, constitutes a fascinating example and offers an interesting analogy. Lacking an atmosphere, it operates as a data center which stores in its body the memory of our solar system and allows predictions for the future. The project presents an imaginary encounter between astronomer Johann Friedrich Julius Schmidt (1825–1884) and the neural network DeepMoon, both of which set out to count the craters on the moon. Speculating upon the possible synergies between human and machine, the artist invites us to imagine how we can learn from and with machines in order to build different, multiple and, possibly, collective understandings of the surrounding world and its cosmos.

Curated by Daphne Dragona

THEODOROS GIANNAKIS @ FRIEZE

SNF ARTWORKS Fellow 2019 Theodoros Giannakis takes part at Frieaze London with the work Always Already aka a primitivism mirage again. The installation is part of Frieze East End Sunday.

2 ARTWORKS FELLOWS winners at the 25th Athens International Film Festival

Congrats to Konstantinos Antonopoulos and Vasilis Kekatos (ARTWORKS Fellows 2019) for winning the award in the Greek Short Stories in competition awards – at the 25th Athens International Film Festival among 311 submissions!

The award for Best Director was presented to Konstantinos Antonopoulos for “Postcards from the End of the World”. The jury awarded this film for being a “redemptive film, elegant and well made”. The award was generously accepted by the director.

The award for Best Film went to: “The Distance Between Us and the Sky” by  Vasilis Kekatos.

ARTWORKS team is proud & happy :)

 

 

The Manual of the Perfect Traveler

“The Manual of the Perfect Traveler” is a group show that explores the concept of travel. Building on Kazantzakis’s phrase “That is why every Perfect Traveler always creates the country where he travels”, six artists illustrate their journey.

A journey of imagination, of self-awareness, or even a real journey.
What comes to our mind when we think of a journey? Is it a getaway, a way out, or a need for knowledge and adventure? In any realization, a journey is an exercise-path leading to inner exploration and development.
An unknown or familiar destination, even a trip of imagination, becomes a means that pushes us out of our comfort zone and changes our perspective through the making of our “own country”.
Through their personal narrative, the artists of the exhibition create a unique manual of the Perfect Traveler, for all those who love to travel and dream.

Curated by: Dialektaki Maria

Artists: Marina Velisioti (Castrata Feel), Kostis Velonis , Leonidas Giannakopoulos, Rania Bellou (Fellow 2018), Pavlos Tsakonas (Fellow 2018), Marco Raparelli

Am I That Name Or That Image?

The way we perceive ourselves and our relations with other human beings are changing drastically in the era of digital culture and this is without doubt a new reality. Artists participating in the exhibition critically comment  through their work the innocent certainly that there are clear border lines between existence and its innovation, the realistic representation and the impersonation. The “reality” of human interaction is disturbed and set-up afresh, in accordance with the image, the mask and the ideal model that we construct for ourselves. That is why the visual representations of the self utilize to such a large extent digital mediums such as photography, the internet, video, and projection.

In their majority, the works of the exhibition come from the collections of the museums that comprised the platform of the Metropolitan Organization of Museums of Visual Arts of Thessaloniki or have been presented in Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art.

The exhibition “Am I That Name, or That Image?” stands in the frame of the collaboration between the two organisations in Thessaloniki and Skopje, as part of a broader collaboration MOMus has with museums in SE Europe.

Curator: Syrago Tsiara

Assistant Curators: Domna Gounari, Eirini Papakonstantinou

Participating Artists: Evangelia Basdekis, Filippo Berta, James Bridle, Kyriaki Goni, Marianna Ignataki, Majida Khattari, Fenia Kotsopoulou, Virginia Mastrogiannaki, Oleg Mavrommati & Boryana Rossa, Eleni Mylonas, Natasha Papadopoulou, Alexandros Plomaritis, Marilou Poncin, Rena Rädle & Vladan Jeremić, Vivi Tsioga, Ira Waldron

 

5 ARTWORKS Fellows at the Athens International Film Festival

ARTWORKS Fellows 2019 Vasilis Kekatos, Konstantinos Antonopoulos, Yorgos Kyvernits and Vaggelis Serfas take part in Greek Short Stories – In Competition . Electric Swan of our Fellow 2018 Konstantina Kotzamani will screen after the Greek Awards Ceremony of the Festival.

Check below our Fellows’ screenings!

Monday, 23/9, 17:30, Danaos 1

The Distance Between Us and the Sky
DURATION: 9’  DIRECTOR: Vasilikis Kekatos (Fellow 2019)
Night, national road. Two strangers meet for the first time at an old gas station. One has stopped to gas up his bike, while the other is just stranded. Lacking the 22.50EUR he needs to get home, he will try to sell him the distance that separates them from the sky.

Postcards from the End of the World
DURATION: 23’
DIRECTOR: Konstantinos Antonopoulos (Fellow 2019)
Trapped in a seemingly dull family vacation, Dimitra, Dimitris and their two daughters will have to find a way out of a secluded island in the Mediterranean when confronted with the unexpected end of the world.               

Tuesday 24/9, 17:30, Οdeon Opera1

The Canaries
DURATION: 17’   DIRECTOR: Yorgos Kyvernitis (Fellow 2019)
Petrina and Stathis fell in love when they were little kids. However, they went separate ways and each one followed their own path. They had children, grandchildren, they raised their families. Several years later, when they were left alone, they got together again, got married to grow old together. Today, at 85 years old, they live together in Syros island with their canaries.

I Only See in Me the Sea
DURATION: 24’   DIRECTOR: Yorgos Kyvernitis (Fellow 2019), Nefeli Oikonomou Pantzou, Maria Sidiropoulou, Alexis Chatzigiannis
Boredom, escape, sea, city, free time. Musician and songwriter Vangelis Germanos, sweeps us along to a summer adventure full of colors and sounds in the city and by the sea.

Wednesday 25/9, 17:00, IDEAL 

Basil
DURATION: 18’   DIRECTOR: Vangelis Serfas (Fellow 2019)
A man returns to his birthplace for his mother’s funeral. She has left a basil pot for him to take care of. During the time he spends there he confronts his past.

Friday , 27/9, 19.15, Danaos 1

Greek Awards Ceremony of the Festival

Electric Swan
DURATION: 40’ DIRECTOR:  Konstantina Kotzamani (Fellow 2018)

Buildings are not supposed to move. But on Avenida Libertador 2050, a building moves and the ceiling shivers, causing a strange nausea that devours its residents. Those who live on the top are afraid they’ll fall – the ones who live beneath are afraid they’ll drown.

Info: http://www.aiff.gr/

13,700,000 km3

Kyriaki Goni (ARTWORKS Fellow 2018), participates in the exhibition 13,700,000 km3, at the Art Space Pythagorion, 4.08.2019 – 30.09.2019.

This year’s exhibition takes as its cue the symbolic location of the Art Space Pythagorion and particularly the view from the main window of the exhibition space onto the Mediterranean Sea. This sea, like all others, is not neutral though its calm waters – as seen from this ‘room with a view’ seems to suggest otherwise. Just 1.2 km away lies Turkey. In 2015 Samos was one of the islands that bore the brunt of the refugee crisis. These are the edges of Europe and the crossroads between three continents, which makes them highly contested in terms of geopolitics. This life-sustaining liquid expanse, and others beyond its basin, is at the cornerstone of environmental, social, economic and geo-political shifts and key questions of today, which transcend its geographic limitations. From borders, national sovereignty, competing economic interests and extractionism, to migration, tourism and environmentalism, the exhibition will look into the politics of the sea and some of the major challenges affecting it. The depths of the sea are the last frontier within human reach, and as such are increasingly vulnerable to human exploitation. Starting by focusing on the local and the regional maritime politics, and expanding to the national and international, it will consider how human activity and human interests impact upon the delicate balance of our planet’s ecosystem, and their repercussions, with the island of Samos and the Mediterranean at the epicenter, but also beyond.

Curated by: Katerina Gregos

Participating artists: Center for Political Beauty, Depression Era, Mark Dion, Kyriaki Goni, Newton Harrison, Panos Kokkinias, Stefan Kruse, Minna Rainio & Mark Roberts / Rainio & Roberts, Sphinxes, Maarten Vanden Eynde

Film Screening: Albatross by Chris Jordan at CINE REX

 

TILT platform: IASIS

Kyriaki Goni (ARTWORKS Fellow 2018) participates in the second edition of TILT platform, titled Iasis at Beau Rivage, Loutraki.

The exhibition unfolds a problematic around our relationship with nature, our body, our psyche, the Other, the technological disruption into our daily lives and what we perceive as the “norm”.

TILT platform, continuing to focus on nature, indeterminacy and the dynamics of boundaries, presents works by contemporary Greek and international artists, who deal with the healing methods we develop through art and research, from the perspective of the social, scientific and existential level as well as the illnesses and the challenges of our time. Besides, the exhibition takes place in Loutraki, a city that is mainly remedial.

How do we define what is normal and what is ill? What can we learn from our tendency to simulate the machine rather the vice versa, when all the characteristic of human nature, like, mistakes, fatigue, the right to choose, are considered to be bland? Can we see humans like the virus that destroys the ecology of the planet? What are the boundaries between the real and the virtual in times of global surveillance? And yet, what does Art stand for in an era so traumatic and so traumatised? The exhibition aims to approach, through four areas of investigation, the concept of Iasis and the way we define it today.

In the first section of Iasis, we question the concept of normality as a social construct. Through a series of works that refer to situations and treatment experiences in contemporary times, TILT platform focuses not only on our personal relationship with the sick body and the perception of diagnosis as an expression of aversion or even racism, but also on the concept of trauma and pain at an existential level.

The second area of the exhibition outlines the political and social dimension of the Medical Speech, both scientific and political arguing in therapeutic terms, while coexisting with the magical functioning of healing, the spell, exorcism, fasting and, of course, the placing the patient’s health on divine favor and Luck.

In the third thematic, we find our relation towards nature, our removal from all that is natural and the exploration of the urban landscape, the industry and cyberspace as the new form of techno-nomadism, while in the fourth area of investigation, we attempt to approach the healing properties of Art, as an omnipotent healing tool.

Participating artists: Margarita Athanasiou, Browser Based (Bjørn Magnhildøen, Alex Zakkas and Zsolt Mesterhazy), John Butler, Yvon Chabrowski, Ted Davis, Stelios Dexis and Myrto Vounatsou, for cancel (Makis Faros, Zoi Pirini and Takis Zervedas), Kyriaki Goni, Ben Grosser, Peggy Kliafa, Mari Massouridou, Vally Nomidou, Eva Papamargariti, Nektarios Pappas and Anna Papaeti, Janis Rafa (Rafaelidou), Jasmin Rapti, Refrakt (Alexander Govoni & Carla Streckwall), Louise Schmid, Spiro Stergiou, Lina Theodorou, Babis Venetopoulos and Liam Young.

ΗΛΕΚΤΡΙΣ how to think like a mountain

ARTWORKS Fellows 2018 Niki Gulema, Katerina Kotsala and Alexandros Kaklamanos, as well as Konstantinos Kotsis (ARTWORKS Fellow 2019), participate in the exhibition ΗΛΕΚΤΡΙΣ how to think like a mountain in Samothraki, 14-28 July 2019.

Τhe group exhibition ΗΛΕΚΤΡΙΣ | How to think like a mountain draws inspiration from Samothrace island. Remote and full of contradictions, with an almost electric charm, it has always been known as sacred place, while its rich nature and history weave its elusive legend until today. The famous quote “Think like a mountain”, by Leopold Aldo, American ecologist who had greatly influenced the contemporary ecocentric approach and the discourse around environmental ethics, strongly resonates with the imposing mountain of the island.

With the Old School in Therma village as a reference point, located in the wild nature of the northern side of Samothrace, eight artists are invited to explore the island and create new works, installations and interventions. It is said that, in past times, classes here often took place outside the school, en plain air, in a way that might be freely juxtaposed with contemporary place-based education. Such a context inevitably raises questions on environmental education, aesthetics and ethics, particularly within a natural environment which encourages embodied perception.

The exhibition explores the role of contemporary artistic practice, manifested outside its usual urban realm, and how it mediates to encourage an alternative, more profound interconnection between human and nature. The rural environment is equally reclaimed as a fertile ground for reflection on socio-political and environmental issues, while nature, history and human activity are experienced as an ever-changing relational field. With the support of NEON.

Artists: Eleanna Balesi, Pythagoras Chatziandreou, Niki Goulema, Alexandros Kaklamanos, Katerina Kotsala, Konstantinos Kotsis, Marina Velisioti, Sofia-Chryssanthi Touboura

Curated by DimitraTsiaouskoglou

Paros Festival 2019: Collecting Stories, Telling Histories

ARTWORKS Fellows 2018 Kyriaki Goni and Rania Bellou participate in the exhibition Collecting Stories, Telling Histories, at the Paros Festival, on July 12th, 13th & 14th.

The exhibition Collecting Stories, Telling Histories narrates a series of interesting and unexpected stories of Paros, the people and their material culture. Artists Kyriaki Goni, Rania Bellou, Panagiotis Kalkavouras, Maria Tzanakou and the photographer Platon examine the various ways in which we remember and forget, collectively and individually. Their own microhistories are intertwined in the exhibition program.

Curated by: Natasa Biza, Katerina Konstantinou

KANTHAROS GATHERINGS

 

Panos Profitis (ARTWORKS Fellow 2018) and Despina Charitonidi are presenting an expanded wine-through-art experience engaging with performance, site-specific sculpture, sound, handcrafted ceramics, organic-meets-industrial scenography, and offerings sourced from exciting local wineries at Dexamenes Seaside Hotel  on June 19 and July 13.

Curator: Eleni Tranouli

 

Sunstreet

ARTWORKS Fellows 2018 Niki Gulema, Chrysanthi Koumianaki and Manolis Daskalakis Lemos, Dimitra Dimopoulou, Natasa Efstathiadi (as Arbit City Group), participate in the Sunstreet exhibition, at the Enterprise Projects, 01.06.2019 – 29.06.2019

If, in a parallelism with the human body, the highways are the arteries of a city, then the back lots of its buildings are its joints, the junctions between the urban skeleton of the apartment blocks that allow the flow of light and air, form the spatial terms of neighbouring and finally define the urban tissue, remaining, nevertheless, undetected.

Sunstreet draws its inspiration by the glamour and the mystery emitted by the Athenian back lots as familiar and, at the same time, distant environments, as places with multiple owners but no user, as microworlds and as spaces/non-spaces.

The project comprises a series of artistic contributions, architectural interventions, gestures and approaches of this small urban utopia, each one of which has a different starting point and a different purpose. The multiplicity of the back lot’s roles often remains an intention, while their manifestation demands that the tenant or the owner becomes a resident. Sunstreet activates the back lot of Enterprise Projects and observes the intention, the function, the evidence and the potential of this space. With the support of NEON.

Enterprise Projects is a project by Danai Giannoglou and Vasilis Papageorgiou functioning independently and periodically since September 2015 in Athens.

Participants: Arbit City Group, Free Piece of Tape, Niki Gulema, GOMA, Persiis Hajiyanni, Byron Kalomamas, Chrysanthi Koumianaki, Theo Prodromidis, Sofia Prifti, George Papadimas, Olga Evangelidou

Pavlos Tsakonas: Two, hands

Pavlos Tsakonas (ARTWORKS Fellow 2018 ) presents his new work at the Athens & Epidaurus Festival (Peireos 260), 30.05.2019 – 17.07.2019.

In 2011, the artist Pavlos Tsakonas was inspired by Albrech Dürer’s popular 1508 pen-and-ink drawing Praying Hands (German: Betende Hände), creating an artwork at Peiraios street, near Omonia Square, that was massively appealing and interacted with its surroundings thanks to its dramatic style and monumental proportions. His new work, Two, Hands, a large-scale mural at the central entrance of Peiraios 260 re-appropriates the classical drawing and creates a fresh variation of it, opening it up to new interpretations, with the participation of architect Vassia Christou.