Category: Fellows/Grantees

Programme “Around the Shelf” curated by Eirini Fountedaki

Collective reading as practice

Although we perceive reading as primarily a solitary activity, for most people throughout history communal reading, that is to say reading aloud with others, has been the norm. Books have had audiences rather than readers. For example, Eric García-Mayer describes oratorial reading among Cuban literary exiles in the United States in the nineteenth century and Elizabeth McHenry investigates African-American reading societies in the twentieth century.[1] The labour of reading could be shared, acting as a catalyst for creating communities; it can even be the remedy in times of hardship, or it can shape new alliances amongst a newly-formed group of readers/listeners.

The programme Around the Shelf is a series of monthly gatherings, bringing together various practitioners across disciplines as facilitators for collective reading processes. Through these gatherings, we will be imagining what reading together can manifest. Reading groups have been historically one of the many tools that various feminist groups utilized as a way to create an empowering and safe environment for their communities. Echoing the feminist practice of giving voice to the voiceless,[2] this series of monthly gatherings invites guests from activism, literature, and visual arts, intending to create empowering and safer spaces for feminist and queer discourse.

Slowing down fast

The methodologies that will be employed aspire to establish a slower temporality of reading, inspired by the notion of Slow down fast, A toda raja[3] as articulated by Camila Marabio and Cecilia Vicuña. In their conversation, Marabio and Vicuña propose to slow down at full speed,[4] feeling a collective pulse as an antidote to the contemporary condition in Chile based on neoliberal monetary and currency policies and colonial oppression. Slowing down processes of reading defines the spirit of Around the Shelf, to develop slow, collective reading methodologies. The gatherings will not require prior preparation, as the group will be reading out loud excerpts from poems, essays, film scripts, artist books, amongst others, and stopping at every sentence or paragraph to reflect and brainstorm together.

When reading with others, we are becoming one whole collective reading body. As Marabio & Vicuña put it, “you are losing your Self and subtracting your-self from the continuity of an existent structure …the thinnest existence of a possible assurance of an “I” gets lost.”[5] It is this entry into a collective consciousness that this series aspires to explore, inviting us to become collective readers and listeners.

To listen with all our senses

Reading in institutions and academia comes with some sort of silence. Library spaces dictate a sonic order, amongst other things, and thus a specific way of approaching texts. How can we bring printed words to life by activating our senses? When reading this out loud, we become listeners of our voice or the voices of others; our ears slowly get used to different accents, timbres, and vocal tones. We can think of listening as a sonic correspondence of reaching out voices which are reflected to our ears; echoes of different subjectivities that move through space by means of sound. Considering the limitations of academia and institutions in relation to active listening and shared living experiences, this programme brings together sound practitioners and performers as facilitators for reading-listening sessions.

Take I with Deniz Kirkali, Thursday 9th November 2023, 8pm

This session, led by independent curator Deniz Kirkali, will initiate a series of collective readings, focusing on attentivity as a methodology for learning from and with others. Directing the attention to the body, this gathering will use material feminisms and posthuman studies as a grounding base for collective explorations on the “arts of noticing”, as articulated by anthropologist Anna Tsing. Deniz will introduce us to practices of attuning through examples from her curatorial work, speculating how we can live, work, feel, and experience differently. The group will also develop a slow reading methodology to delve into excerpts from Bayo Akomolafe’s writings, which call us to attune to the “wisdom of soil”. Drawing inspiration from alternative narratives, how can we challenge our entanglements with the all-living world, and challenge epistemological power?

Duration:
9th November 2023 – 13rd June 2024

Set dates & time:
Every second Thursday of the month (unless indicated otherwise) at 8pm

Curator:
Eirini Fountedaki*

Guests:
Federica Bueti, Vassilia Kaga, Deniz Kirkali, Danae Stefanou and others (tbc)

TAVROS
Anaxagora 33 (1st floor), 17778, Tavros, Greece

*Eirini Fountedaki is SNF Curatorial ARTWORKS Fellow 2020

 

[1] Eric García-Mayer, “Narrating Nation Aloud: Oratory, Embodied Reading Practices, and the Cuban Imaginary in Villaverde and Mariño’s El Independiente, “Folklife in Louisiana: Louisiana’s Living Traditions”, 2013, http://www.louisianafolklife.org/LT/Articles_Essays/lfmnarrating.html, accessed 15 October 2023; Elisabeth McHenry, Forgotten Readers Recovering the Lost History of African American Literary Societies, Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2002.

[2] Samia Malik in “Reading as Activism: the WOCI Reading Group” in Shelf Documents: Art Library as Practice, ed. Heide Hinrichs, Jo-ey Tang, Elizabeth Haines, Antwerp: Pascale De Groote, 2000.

[3] Camila Marambio and Cecilia Vicuña, Slow Down Fast, A Toda Raja, Berlin: Errant Bodies Press, 2019.

[4] “A toda raja” is a Chilean expression with multiple colloquial uses. It can mean at full speed, intensely or with great sentiment. See Marambio and Vicuña, Slow Down Fast, A Toda Raja, 5.

[5] Marambio and Vicuña, Slow Down Fast, A Toda Raja, 10.

Mystery 151: A Rave Down Below | Curated by Panos Giannikopoulos

From November 18 to January 28, 2023 Eleusis European Capital of Culture presents the group exhibition Mystery 151 A Rave Down Below featuring the participation of acclaimed artists from Greece and abroad and showcasing a series of new productions, curated by Panos Giannikopoulos.

Mystery 151 A Rave Down Below explores the political dynamics of the body in motion from a simultaneously geological and cultural underground point of departure. Alchemical wanderings from the historical past towards mythology and a post-industrial present culminate in a delirious dance. Inebriation, intoxication, revulsion, euphoria, release, vent, and ascent; a circular path from the body to the ground and back again.

The exhibition’s narrative unfolds through the myths and history of the city of Elefsina and its Mysteries, with dance serving as a means of climax, a sacred ritual, and a method for exploring concepts of death and loss. In Mystery 151 A Rave Down Below, we witness dance and its affinity with the ailing body or even itself as illness and therapy, dance in a state of crisis, as exhaustion that brings pleasure displacing social exhaustion, as escape and counteraction.

Mystery 151 A Rave Down Below focuses on the potential for creating corporeal archives, nonlinear knowledge transmission, and storytelling with unexpected cross-cultural affinities. The ephemeral, physicality, uncertainty, and performativity elements serve as critical starting points and accompany the audience through the viewing and participation process.

Through installations, painting, sculpture, sound, and performance, the exhibition seeks to redefine the boundaries of dance, reflecting on the (collective) body and its absence, memory, and the necessity of movement. It contemplates utopian declarations of dance subcultures, their glorification, thwarting, and commercial exploitation, hovering between desire, disappointment, and expectation. It examines the relationship between dance movements and community formation, as well as demands for social justice, portraying dance as a translinguistic activity for creating a new world: a delirious grammar that is impossible to parse, slippery in mind and unwieldy in the mouth, passing through muscle spasms, chemical compounds, machines and pixels.

Mystery 151 A Rave Down Below coincides with the celebration of “Mesosporitissa” connecting different historical periods of Elefsina while marking the transition into winter.

The opening of the exhibition features the performances by Odete and Nkisi and an all-night party with local and international Djs, Fofi Tsesmeli, Odete, Amateurboyz, Ayshel & GRΞTA.

Information:
Duration: November 18, 2023 – January 28, 2024
Opening hours:
Wednesday to Friday, 17.00 – 20.00
Saturday & Sunday, 13.00 – 20.00
Location: Old Oil Mill Factory
Opening: Saturday November 18, 20.00

Opening Programme:
20.00 | Opening
21.30 | Cicada/Cicala, Odete – Performance
22.15 | Nkisi – Performance
23.00 | DJ sets – Line-up
Fofi Tsesmeli
Odete
Amateurboyz
Ayshel
GRΞTA

Contributors:

Participating artists: Theodoros Giannakis / Viktor Gogas & Kostas Kostopoulos / Captain Stavros / Lito Kattou / Petros Moris / Nkisi / Katerina Papazissi / Georgia Sagri / George Sapountzis / Baratto & Mouravas / Flux Office / Greek Visions / Klaus Jurgen Schmidt / Odete / Diana Policarpo / Wu Tsang
Curated by: Panos Giannikopoulos
Curatorial director: Zoi Moutsokou
Public Program / Publication: Angeliki Tzortzakaki
Architectural Design: Trail Practice
Research: Georgia Liapi
Production management: WILD REEDS
Texts: Leandros Kyriakopoulos, McKenzie Wark, Panos Giannikopoulos, Angeliki Tzortzakaki
Lighting: Aslight
Scaffolding: Greenskal

2023 Eleusis European Capital of Culture

*Theodoros Giannakis and Petros Moris are SNF ARTWORKS Visual Arts Fellows

Stella Dimitrakopoulou presents the video performance ‘Construction Insight’ in the context of the exhibition «The beauty and its rival»

The video-performance Construction Insight presents a process of exploration and shaping of a partially demolished construction site and the materials it contains. Simultaneously, this process is linked to the search for and shaping of human identity. The work constitutes an alchemical experiment with structural materials and bodies in a ritualistic journey inward.

Video-performance CONSTRUCTION INSIGHT
«The beauty and its rival»

Centrally located on Agias Eirinis Square in the heart of Athens, stands the shell of the old Athenian Hotel
“Byron”. Its construction began 190 years ago under the name Hotel “Anatoli” during the first half of the
19th Century (1833-39) when Athens had just become the capital of the newly established Greek state
(1834). It was the most distinguished hotel of the time, hosting prestigious receptions and galas for the
Athenian society. It is believed to have accommodated King Othonas upon his arrivals in Athens. Βetween
1839 and 1842, it had housed the National Observatory of Athens before relocating to the hill of Nymphs
in the historic area of Thissio. The ground floor contained a collection of small shops for clothes and
pesticides. In 1987 the building was classified as a historical monument by the Hellenic Ministry of
Culture.

In a city that we love to hate either because we don’t consider it to be ours, or we see ourselves as mere
bystanders or we like to complain, changes are constantly taking place. Considering these developments,
are we prepared? Does the new-old Athens keep us captive to its ideology? A course of visual ideas open
discussion on the future city model. Gotham city, Limnopolis, Athens is the new Berlin (without money
though), Athens/Kabul. This serves as inspiration for artists as they respond, along with conversations led
by architects, poets, engineers, and shopkeepers, to the conceptualization of the ‘ideal’ city model. The
shell of the old Athenian Hotel “Byron” which is undergoing restoration will host experimental
installations, screenings and performances, bringing after decades, new life the building’s empty rooms
and shops.

Noam Assayag, Katerina Botsari, Capten, Stella Dimitrakopoulou, Alexandros Kontogeorgakopoulos/
Odysseas Klissouras, Lah Porella, Helen Polychronidou, Natassa Poulantza, Hector Theoulakis,
Theodoros Zafeiropoulos.

Curated by: Georg Georgakopoulos

25 – 28.11.2023
Opening: Saturday, November 25, 19:00 – 22:00
Hours: Daily and weekends, 18:00 – 22:00
Former hotel «Byron»
38 Aiolou str. Athens 105 51, entrance from Agias Eirinis Square

CHEAPART / APART / F.O.T.A.
https://athensintersection.blogspot.com
www.cheapart.gr
www.apart-network.gr
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UNBOXING CALLAS: An Archival Exploration of the Pyromallis Collection and the GNO Archive

As part of the second phase of the Greek National Opera’s visual arts programme marking the centennial of Maria Callas’ birth, the Greek National Opera presents the exhibition titled UNBOXING CALLAS: An Archival Exploration of the Pyromallis Collection and the GNO Archive curated by Vassilis Zidianakis, to be presented on the second floor of the National Library of Greece and inside the GNO Foyer at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center. The exhibition opens to the public on Sunday, 26 November 2023 at 17.00, and will run from 27 November through until 10 January, 10.00-21.00 daily. The GNO Year of Callas tribute programme is sponsored by the PPC (Public Power Corporation). This programme is made possible by a grant from the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF) [www.SNF.org] to enhance the GNO’s artistic outreach.

Taking the donation of the Dimitris Pyromallis Collection to the Greek National Opera Archive as his point of departure, ATOPOS cvc Artistic Director Vassilis Zidianakis invites us to discover the legendary La Divina anew by means of an artistic act of unboxing. The collection of Dimitris Pyromallis, which he recently donated to the Greek National Opera Archive, includes some 4,000 vinyl records, 6,000 CDs, hundreds of books, newspaper clippings, periodicals, thousands of photographs, autographs, handwritten notes, postage stamps featuring Callas’ likeness from various countries, medals minted in her honour, and some of her personal effects. At the age of four, Dimitris Pyromallis met Maria Callas by chance on the island of Zakynthos – this encounter left such an impression on him that, from the age of 20, he devoted his life to this collection on the art of Maria Callas.

Inspired by the act of unboxing made popular by online communities, this exhibition proposes an artistic and inter-disciplinary means of approaching, exploring, and understanding both the Greek National Opera Archive and the legend that surrounds the greatest opera singer of all time: Maria Callas. This Greek National Opera UNBOXING CALLAS exhibition is being held in partnership with ATOPOS cvc and the Atopos Unbound programme, and with the National Library of Greece and the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center. The exhibition fosters the feel of an open archive within which the curatorial team invite artists, conservators, archivists, and researchers to work, opening up its archival boxes to discover stories, memories, and objects relating to Callas but also the famous artist herself, as well as the ways in which she is still an inspiration in the fields of contemporary research, academic study, and artistic creation. The creation of an open archive is squarely aimed at giving the public direct access to these archival materials, but also to the approaches and narratives that frame them. Specifically, the exhibition brings to the fore the archival, conservation, and documentation practices that have played such a formative role in the design and structure of UNBOXING CALLAS.

Exhibited on the second floor of the National Library of Greece will be the Dimitris Pyromallis Collection in its entirety – discography, bibliography, rich photographic materials, and objects. Presented alongside it will be additional items drawn from the GNO’s historical archive that now also includes the photographic output of Kleisthenis Daskalakos relating to the GNO performances Maria Callas gave at the Ancient Theatre of Epidaurus (Norma in 1960 and Medea in 1961), items from the archives of Leonidas Zoras and Achilleas Mamakis, and costume-related materials connected to Maria Callas’ performances in Greece that have been sourced from the GNO Costume Department.

Exhibited alongside these archival materials will be original artworks inspired by the Dimitris Pyromallis Collection – works created by the contemporary artists Angeliki Bozou, Petros Efstathiadis, Panayotis Evangelidis, Eleftheria Kotzaki, Chrysanthi Koumianaki, Lykourgos Porfyris, Panos Profitis, Marios Stamatis, and Maria Varela, who were invited to explore, adapt, and re-delineate these archival materials in an attempt to offer up a freer, more subjective form of knowledge. On 26 November, the first day of the exhibition, the artist Angeliki Bozou will be presenting a performance at 19.00.

Presented in parallel inside the ground-floor Foyer of the Greek National Opera will be an original artwork by Alexis Fidetzis and Malvina Panagiotidi.

As part of the exhibition, on Monday through Thursday mornings from 10.00 to 13.00, preservation practices relating to the archive will be undertaken in real time. Specifically:

Α. In the Costume Conservation Workshop, two historic Maria Callas costumes will undergo invasive conservation treatments that include their cleaning, re-shaping, and stabilising, and the sensitive restoration of damaged areas.

Β. In the Paper Conservation Workshop, conservators will perform initial repair work on historic printed programmes created for Greek National Opera performances in which Maria Callas appeared.

C. At the Archiving Station, the documentation, archiving, and organisation of the photographic collection recently donated to the Greek National Opera by Dimitris Pyromallis will continue before the eyes of visitors.

Year of Callas tribute programme curator: Giorgos Koumendakis
UNBOXING CALLAS curator: Vassilis Zidianakis / ATOPOS cvc
Curatorial associate: Steffi Stouri
Consultant: Dimitris Pyromallis
Research associate: Sophia Kompotiati

With the artists: Angeliki Bozou, Petros Efstathiadis, Panayotis Evangelidis, Alexis Fidetzis – Malvina Panagiotidi, Eleftheria Kotzaki, Chrysanthi Koumianaki, Lykourgos Porfyris, Panos Profitis, Marios Stamatis, and Maria Varela

In partnership with ATOPOS cvc and the Atopos Unbound programme

26 Νovember 2023 – 10 January 2024

Second floor of the National Library of Greece & GNO Foyer – SNFCC

10.00–21.00 daily

The exhibition opens to the public on 26 November 2023, at 17.00.

Free admission

*Angeliki Bozou, Petros Efstathiadis, Alexis Fidetzis – Malvina Panagiotidi, Chrysanthi Koumianaki, Panos Profitis, Marios Stamatis, and Maria Varela are Visual Arts SNF ARTWORKS Fellows.

“BONE TO BONE” exhibition

BONE TO BONE exhibition, curated by Thanasis Chondros and Alexandra Katsiani.
Participating artists: D. Ameladiotis, G. Kaltsidis, Th. Karonis, N. Kryonidis, V. Mastrogiannaki & St. Mpampalos, F. Nuskas, S. Pehlivanidou, N. Varytimiadis.

With Stefanos Mpampalos in sound editing, Virginia Mastrogiannaki present the video yιantes / the painter and the girl, a reference to the work of Nikolaos Gyzis.
The painted portrait entitled yιantes by N. Gyzis is a daring work for its era (1878), both in terms of its incomplete painting gesture and its title itself, and therefore open to many interpretations.
Υiantes painted by N. Gyzis coexists and is exhibited in the National Gallery with his own portrait – slightly earlier – painted by his colleague Ludwig Thiersch (1865).

The exhibition “BONE TO BONE” will run until Thursday 14 December 2023
Daily from 18:00 to 22:00
To Pikap Kato, 57 Olympou str, Thessaloniki, Greece

*Virginia Mastrogiannaki is a visual arts SNF ARTWORKS Fellow (2019)

Elli Antoniou in two exhibition in London: “Al Dente: A Feast for the Senses” & “things fall apart; the centre cannot hold”

Elli Antoniou (SNF ARTWORKS Fellow) participates in two exhibitions in London.

29/11 Al Dente: A Feast for the Senses
Curated by Edoardo Monti
Bernston Bhattachatjee, London, W1T 3NE

30/11 things fall apart; the centre cannot hold
Curated by Kollektiv Collective
Tabula Rasa Gallery, London, N1 6AQ

Al Dente: A Feast for the Senses opens on Wednesday, 29 November 6-8pm, at Berntson Bhattacharjee Gallery. Guest-curated by Edoardo Monti, the exhibition is shining a spotlight on the creative endeavours of twelve artists who recently completed a month-long residency at his prestigious Palazzo Monti in Brescia, Italy. Monti has carefully curated a selection of artists who are evolving the craft of their artistic field and finding international recognition as ones to watch. Exhibited artists are Hiva Alizadeh, Elli Antoniou, Andrea Bocca, Bea Bonafini, Thomas De Falco, Kirsten Deirup, John Fou, David Gardner, Delphine Hennelly, Eliza Hopewell, Madeleine Roger-Lacan, and Hannah Tilson.

As the founder and driving force behind one of the world’s leading residencies, Monti places paramount importance on his social duty to nurture and champion emerging talent. In doing so, he has established a sense of community and refuge at Palazzo Monti, where resident artists become part of his family and home. Al Dente: A Feast for the Senses is an example of Monti’s curatorial household and aptitude for bringing together artists with diverse practices and

Backgrounds.

things fall apart; the centre cannot hold opens on Thursday, 30 November, 6–8pm, at Tabula Rasa Gallery. Guest-curated by London-based curatorial collective Kollektiv Collective, this collaborative and site-specific group exhibition features newly commissioned and existing works by artists Elli Antoniou, Ali Glover and Richard Dean Hughes.

In an attempt to think the unthought and give form to the formless, things fall apart; the centre cannot hold explores an aesthetic of rebuilding. Seeking potential in slippage and dissonance, it imagines a mode of perception turning to non-quantifiable ways of understanding. Relying on opacity and ambivalence as sources of knowledge, the exhibition dilutes the familiar and reverses the definite, searching for liberation in the absence of anticipation. The gallery becomes trapped in the vacuum of its own space, where the facades have collapsed and in the ruins of certainty, secrets are revealed in whispers. Alongside each other, the works of Elli Antoniou, Ali Glover and Richard Hughes defy expectations, demanding questions be answered otherwise.

ΕΧΗΙΒΙΤΙΟΝ & CONFERENCE “Art, a silent revolution” curated by Nicolas Vavmouklis

The Hellenic Ministry of Social Cohesion and Family Affairs, completing its “Art, a silent revolution” program, presents an exhibition and a conference on 5, 6, and 7 December 2023 at the Athens Conservatoire.

It presents ten young artists and collectives from all over Greece selected through an open call to express how their work (visual arts, moving image, performance) can serve as a dynamic tool of social transformation and change. The program creates a forum for discussion on how to address violence, abuse, harassment, and bullying. By acknowledging and examining similar traumatic cases, the artists present their perspectives, suggesting ways to heal and prevent them individually and collectively. Their works transmit messages against oppression, stereotypes, prejudices, and inequalities.

How can young people build a new framework of empowerment that fosters visibility and inclusivity for all individuals? What is their role in awakening and shaping an egalitarian society where culture is the central drive for development? A parallel conference will bring together professionals from art and culture, representatives of the university community, politicians, educators, sociologists, and psychologists.

Participating artists: Dimitra Stavropoulou, Dimitris Kapetanou, Virginia Russolo, Eleanna Balesi, Sia-Efstathia Koutli, Elina Demirtzioglou & Aristeidis Lappas, Georgette Alimperti & Niki Theodoridi, Fotini Tatsi, Giorgos Palaeologos, Angelos Papadopoulos.

The program is curated by Nicolas Vamvouklis / K-Gold Temporary Gallery.

Opening: Tuesday 5/12, 19:00, Ω2 Complex, Athens Conservatoire
Exhibition opening hours: 6-7/12, 10:00-20:00
Conference opening hours: 6-7/12, 10:00-18:00

*Aristeidis Lappas, Angelos Papadopoulos and Nicolas Vamvouklis are SNF ARTWORKS Fellows

NATALIA MANTA PARTICIPATES IN THE GROUP EXHIBITION “THAT WHICH WAS IS NOW NO MORE”

THAT WHICH WAS IS NOW NO MORE

On Tuesday December 5th 2023, from 18:00 until 21:00, the group show titled That which was is now no more opens at Ileana Tounta Contemporary Art Center.

Participating artists:
Chronis Botsoglou, Nikos Komiotis, Natalia Manta, Eva Mitala, Doreida Xhogu

Curated by Galini Lazani

The exhibition will be on view until 27.01.2024


Some issues are hard to talk about. Probably because they are hard to comprehend. And some concepts are hard to narrow down. The title of this exhibition encloses everything that changes around us and shakes us up. Animate and inanimate beings, our environment, the people that surround us and ourselves. Things that perish, change, are reborn. That which was is now no more. Yet, it is something new.

The artists that present their work in this exhibition each deal, through their own thoughts and means, with these notions of change and loss, but also with the creation that eventually results from them.

Doreida Xhogu’s video, accompanied by a series of small wooden sculptures reminiscent of relics, depicts the personal ritual created by the artist in order to come to terms with her father’s death, which occurred during her absence. In his workplace, a mine in Albania, the artist constructed a huge human effigy out of straw and tar, which she then bedded for one night in her house and finally burned. The way she came up with to process this painful feeling of loss turned out to be her own personal creation after all.

Τhe new series of Eva Mitala‘s silkscreen prints also debate loss, in a sense. A loss of a completely different kind though, not so permanent and stagnant, but rather one that points to a shifting condition. Through her research on Chile’s Atacama Desert and the life of the indigenous inhabitants of the region, she incorporates in her work, through a mixture of digital and traditional techniques, issues that concern us all. Issues that become tangible in a “world in transition”, as she calls it, such as the extinction of traditional practices, languages, natural habitats. However, through extinction comes rebirth in the form of new, different ways of creation, as culture always finds its way to express itself.

Furthermore, the works presented by Natalia Manta, which always give the viewer the feeling that they come from or are intended for some kind of ritual, also deal with the life-giving power of loss and danger, since they take the form of sculptural totems in which one can recognize the bearing of some new life, yet at the same time of some unidentifiable threat as well. “Essentially, the entire installation reflects a prolonged suspension, in which existential anguish is established and defined as hope”, the artist mentions.

These thoughts, which contemplate the agony of human existence and its transfiguration into creation, lead to Chronis Botsoglou‘s series of works in which he portrays his mother during the days of her sickness. Their association to the exhibition is not about old age and death, but about the dementia that afflicted her amid her final years and everything that comes along with it; the deterioration of a person’s consciousness, personality and identity. “The disintegration of the face”, as Botsoglou described it referring to his mother, subsequently relates to Nikos Komiotis’ painting.

The main morphological element of Komiotis’ work is the disfiguration of human characteristics, due to which the figures he depicts appear to fluctuate between a lifeless and an animalistic condition of being. His frequent inspiration from the sequence of film frames, where for split seconds the features get mixed up, jumbled and lost, reminds us once again that subtle changes can ultimately lead to a new spectacle, a new creation.

Galini Lazani
November 2023

Ileana Tounta Contemporary Art Center / 48, Armatolon & Klefton Street, Athens 114 71
tel: +30 210 6439466 / fax:+30 210 6442852 / www.art-tounta.gr / [email protected]

Visiting hours: Tue – Thu: 15:00 – 20:00, Wed – Fri: 12:00 – 20:00, Saturday: 12:00 – 16:00

*The title of the exhibition was inspired by a phrase from Thomas Hardy’s novel A pair of blue eyes: “…she that was is now no more”.

‘The Meaning of Queer Ritual Fusion 1’

The title of the new evolving project is ‘The Meaning of Queer Ritual Fusion 1’, arising from the shared need of four individuals to coexist. Is there a meaning in making art today? The goal is for this sharing with the audience to be the first of many.

2,3,4,9,10 December 2023, 21.00
Location: Μ54
Μενάνδρου 54, Αθήνα
https://goo.gl/maps/HkLxuPEtYDYSWM7k8

Creation-Participants: Pagona Boubasakou, Angelos Papadopoulos, Elpiniki Saripanidou, Elsa Siskou
Concept – Directorial Supervision: Angelos Papadopoulos
Music: Nikos Antonopoulos
Costume Design – Construction: Dynno Dada
Lighting Design: Janos Mazis
Dramaturgical Contribution: Elena Novakovic
Trailer, Poster: Katerina Tsakiri
Make-up Art: Emmanuel Kamakaris
Special Thanks: Kosmas Lapidis, Fay Tzouma, Charlotte Virgile

 

 

Master of Fine Arts Degree Show

The Athens School of Fine Arts invites you to the 18th study cycle Master of Fine Arts Degree Show.

Participants: Athanasios Athanasiadis, Marianna Athanasiou, Artemis Chatziathanasiadou – Dede, Erifili Doukeli, Marilia Fotopoulou, Viki Gerofoka, Candy Karra

Location:

Athens School of Fine Arts – Pireos 256

MET studios building

*Erifili Doukeli is SNF ARTWORKS Visual Arts Fellow (2021)

GROUP EXHIBITION “Shifting”

Shifting
shifting adjective UK /ˈʃɪf.tɪŋ/ US /ˈʃɪf.tɪŋ/ always changing or moving

Curated by Florent Frizet

w/
Despina Charitonidi

Leo Chesneau

Nadja Geer

Agata Ingarden

Katerina Komianou

Danai Kotsaki

Anna Lascari

Nicolas Melemis

Dimitris Tampakis

Eleni Tomadaki

Marios Stamatis

Camille Yvert

 

Opening Saturday 20/01/2024, 7-10pm

Until 17/02/2024

Opening hours Wed to Sat 4-8pm

One Minute Space
Marathonos 71, Athens 10435

T: +30 6949085521
[email protected]

*Katerina Komianou, Eleni Tomadaki & Marios Stamatis are SNF ARTWORKS Visual Arts Fellows

Despina Zacharopoulou’s article “Contracts as Protocols of Governmentality in Performance Art” in Performance Research Journal

Despina Zacharopoulou’s (SNF ARTWORKS Fellow 2021) text “Contracts as Protocols of Governmentality in Performance Art” is now available as an Open Access article in Performance Research Journal ‘On Meeting’ Vol. 28, Issue 2 (2023), edited by Simon Bayly and Johanna Linslay. Cover Image: Mark Robson.

Abstract
This essay raises questions regarding meeting protocols as a form of art practice. Drawing on recent examples from my performance works, I initiate a discussion about how contracts in performance art might operate as protocols of governmentality, offering morphogenetic structures towards other ways of ‘meeting with’. The term ‘governmentality’ is used to designate all those ‘regulatory apparatuses (dispositives)’ that exercise power via protocols of economy and circulation, to engender new subjectivities (Foucault 2007), whereas the term ‘morphogenesis’ is employed to describe processes where the genesis of forms follows a sensuous logic of structural disposition or tendency that organizes disparities of potential events. One could argue that in the 1970s, several performance artists adopted contractual methods of negotiating their meeting with an audience in order to critically expose the power dynamics existing within everyday hierarchical relations (O’Dell 1998). In so doing, contracts often demarcated the roles of the artist and the audience from the outset of the live work, as already fixed, separate subjectivities, thus sustaining binary essentialist categories (for example subject vs. object, and so on) as met within the philosophical tradition of dialectics (Golding 2021). However, in my performance works brought forward, contracts operate as protocols of governmentality, offering morphogenetic structures governing the thickness and the porosity of boundaries within the ways that people come to meet with one another, without pre-determining any final outcomes or assigning specific roles to the parties involved. Contracts in this case establish a set of meeting protocols that generate and distribute intensities through the organization of areas of possibilities for the emergence of potential events. And it is within this shifting topography of events that subjectivities emerge through the ways that bodies affect and are affected by other bodies via processes of use.

For a full PDF version of Despina Zacharopoulou’s article, please visit: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/epdf/10.1080/13528165.2023.2260705?needAccess=true&fbclid=IwAR2acYHFiB-oWwzIMMv5OJtS35xA-vC9a_oyOJgGXmFdBHR_a21dEt3ICCw

For the whole Issue of Performance Research ‘On Meeting’, please visit:
https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rprs20/28/2

 

On the Sea of my Tttttongue [θθθθθάλασσα – στην άκρη της γλώσσας] CURATED BY CATERINA STAMOU

Αμμωνίτες: from Lake Garda to Athens, the hands carry the limestone like a memory. The body leaves something of itself on the fossil; both transient, they historicize themselves through their embrace. ⸹
Βοτσαλωτά: ceramic pebbles, unwalked. Can a field research fit in the palm of two hands? Cut in half, their nature is followed by a thought, the pebbles to come in pairs, like waves. ☼ ⸛
Γοργόνες: poetesses of liquidity. From the shoal to the shore they recite their poetry with stutters. Their aim is to break the language of the beachgoers in half, like an oyster. ϒ
Δίχτυ: permeable body, vulnerable. Being cut, it changes into something new, performing a transformation. ⸎
Εμπιστοσύνη: practiced through active listening as the dolphins swim next to each other. ⸨
Ζωγραφιές: frescoes you saw in your sleep; if someone looks at them, she gets a glimpse of your dreams. Ꜣ
Ηώς (ή Έως): what if she’s not the Sun’s sister, but the Sun herself? She arrives fiercely to build networks of light, only to leave afterwards to what her myth has built for her. No one really knows her, only the bronze reflections of the dawn. ☼
Θεότητες: all of them are multilingual, they talk about «θθθθθάλασσα», “mmmmmare” and “bbbbbahr”. ⸾ ⸧ ⸛
Ιστορία: the air brings her towards us since the iodine-like smell of the saline water contains her. ⸛
Καλυψώ: once you find her (coordinates 36°34′N 21°8′E) she’ll tell you she never forced him to stay, he was the one who wouldn’t leave. ⸖
Λήμνος ή/και Λέσβος: you took Leucothea’s rage for Poseidon and turned it into affection, sublimated into ethnographies of the northeastern Aegean islands. ⸨
Μνήμη της θάλασσας: what if the tides are nothing more than the release of elevated grief? Ꝍ
Νέα μυθολογία: all the primordial creatures they hid from you at school now come to life through you, and are reflected in the marble as you contemplate it. Ꜣ
Ξεχασμένο: water is not nation-centric. ⸧
Όσφρηση: beyond language, it functions as an intrusive antidote to collective amnesia. ⸶
Παραλία: vibrant dream whose materials you wish to recover. ϒ
Ρόκα: you pull it out of your belt as if it were a sword and visualize your own theory of affect. ⸶
Σιμόν Φατάλ: Etel Adnan dedicated to her a chapter about the sea in which she wrote: “the sea’s instincts collaborate with ours to create thinking”. ⸛
Τηθύς: unclassifiable memory, ineradicable. Common between the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. ⸹
Υφαντά: beyond the loom, they are spoken like throbs, written like foams, read like pulses. ⸎
Φεγγάρι: for thirteen months it has been shining for you to embroider your book. And as its phases change, so do your poems. ⸙
Χρόνος: the dysfluent speech of the waves creates it anew. ⸙ ⸾
Ψαράκι: coping mechanism is its short term memory, since everything it sees accumulates in the multiple layers of its eyes. Ꝍ
Ωροσκόπιο: it points to where the sea intersects; the horizon on the tip of your tongue. ⸖ ⸧ ⸾

Curated by Caterina Stamou. Artists: ⸖ Mairy Antonopoulou, ⸎ Maria Ikonomopoulou, ⸙ Marianna Karava, Ꝍ Athina Koumparouli, Ꜣ Elina Niarchou, ϒ Astra Papachristodoulou, ⸹ Irene Ragusini, ⸶ Elektra Stampoulou, ⸨ Ειρήνη Τηνιακού, ☼ Myrto Vratsanou ||| Poetic references: ⸛ Etel Adnan, ⸾ Jjjjjerome Ellis, ⸧ Vera Linder

On the Sea of my Tttttongue [θθθθθάλασσα – στην άκρη της γλώσσας]

γκαλερί Gramma_Epsilon 

Duration: February 8 – March 9, 2024

Opening hours: Tuesday to Saturday: 11:00-19:00

*Caterina Stamou, Athina Koumparouli, Elina Niarchou, Irene Ragusini, Elektra Stampoulou, Irini Tiniakou, Myrto Vratsanou are SNF ARTWORKS Fellows. 

KYRIAKI GONI @ Serpentine Cinema: An Act of Wonder and Gratitude

A programme of artists’ moving image works which share reflections on technology, ritual and the more-than-human world.

This evening of screenings includes works by Patricia Dominguez, Kyriaki Goni, Agnieszka Polska, Laure Prouvost, Tabita Rezaire, Selvagem/Ailton Krenak, and Emilija Škarnulytė. The programme will be accompanied by live interventions by artists Kyriaki Goni and Patricia Dominguez.

An Act of Wonder and Gratitude was originally curated by Lucia Pietroiusti, Serpentine Head of Ecologies, as part of the Woods: More-than-Human-Curiosity symposium. Organised by are-events.org, the event takes place annually in the Orlické Mountains, Czech Republic. Woods operates at the intersection of contemporary art, the landscape, human health, and interspecies coexistence.

Serpentine Cinema: An Act of Wonder and Gratitude
Part of Serpentine Ecologies
Offsite / Ciné Lumière, Institut Français du Royaume-Uni, 17 Queensberry Place, London SW7 2DW
Monday 12 February 2024, 7-9.30pm
PRICE: £9, £7 CONC

Programme:

Patricia Dominguez, Matrix Vegetal, 2022

Emilija Škarnulytė, Sunken Cities, 2021

Kyriaki Goni, The Mountain Islands Shall Mourn us Eternally (Data Garden Dolomites), 2022

Tabita Rezaire, Premium Connect, 2016

Laure Prouvost, Into all that is here, 2015

Agnieszka Polska, The Book of Flowers, 2023

Selvagem/Ailton Krenak, Time and Love, 2022

*Kyriaki Goni is SNF ARTWORKS Visual Arts Fellow (2018)

Vasilis Papageorgiou |Sunseekers or Dimming the Sun or

In “Sunseekers or Dimming the Sun or” Vasilis Papageorgiou reflects on the vicious cycle between labour, leisure, and exhaustion (both human and planetary). By associating the depletion of planetary resources with burnout, Papageorgiou investigates the relationship between capitalist systems of pleasure, their role in the cyclical depletion of planetary resources, and the loop these create in relation the need for rest and regeneration.

The concept of the exhibition is somewhat influenced by George Papam’s text Hospitality Fatigue: Symptoms and Potions (in: Island after Tourism – Escaping the Monocultures of Leisure, Kyklada Press, 2023), in which the author is exploring different models of inhabiting and relating to landscape. Following, Papargeorgiou links the exhaustion of planetary resources to burnout, poetically employing the beach as a central metaphor to portray it as the ultimate fantasy where the dichotomies of nature and human indulgence merge. He reflects on leisure and pleasure as both a cause and a symptom of this exhaustion, hinting that structures of leisure, such as private beaches, contribute to further resource depletion, trapping humanity in a vicious cycle that ultimately stifles imagination.

The exhibition operates with several motifs embedded in the exhibition as sculptures or in the form of video installation. The metal sunbeds with various significant elements such as copper-plated beach towels, or a flower that emerges from beneath a sunbed, as a symbol of resilience against the structures of human-created leisure. Quotidian situations in which people utilize water against heatwaves in different parts of Europe are captured by the artist by his phone camera. One video depicts an elderly lady in the village Lin in Albania throwing a bucket of water on the street. Another shows affluent children playing in a fountain at Place des Vosges in Paris. These contrasting uses of water in different European contexts underscore the disparity in resource utilization in the cycle of leisure and exhaustion.

Vasilis Papageorgiou (*1991, Athens, Greece) is an artist based in Athens. His work has been showcased in notable exhibitions, including the 7th Athens Biennale – Eclipse (2021), Benaki Museum (2019), Stavros Niarchos Cultural Foundation (2019), and MAXXI – the National Museum of 21st Century Arts (2019). He also participated in the 6th Moscow International Biennale for Young Arts (2018), among others. Additionally, Papageorgiou is a co-founder of Enterprise Projects, an initiative and project space in Athens, established in 2015, that focuses on artist and curator collaborations.

*Vasilis Papageorgiou is SNF ARTWORKS Visual Arts Fellow 2018

 

KYRIAKI GONI @ ATTENTION AFTER TECHNOLOGY Group Show

State of Concept proudly presents a group exhibition with newly commissioned works exploring the relationships between attention, algorithms, and social justice. Founded in a collaboration between Kunsthall Trondheim, Art Hub Copenhagen, Tropical Papers and Swiss Institute New York, with The Friends of Attention, D. Graham Burnett (Princeton University), Justin Smith-Ruiu (Université de Paris) as associated partners.

The two-year collaborative project Attention After Technology explores how algorithms affect us and how we could imagine them otherwise, through newly commissioned works by six international artists. The artists consider how our attention is commodified and monetized, examine how algorithms reinforce bias while also probing their emancipatory potential, and analyze attention as a political space to foster sustained critical thinking and to support collective action.

The exhibition title, Attention After Technology, is a reference to Ruha Benjamin’s celebrated book Race After Technology (2019). In her publication, Benjamin decodes the discriminatory designs embedded in algorithms that prop up racial, socioeconomic, and other systemic hierarchies. Attention is a much discussed topic with regard to technology. It is closely connected to epistemic justice, or the creation and recognition of diverse forms of knowledge, experiences, and perspectives. Our capacity as knowing subjects, and being recognized as such, is an essential component of agency agency and our ability for choice. It is crucial for social justice.

While distraction and fragmentation may seem like antonyms of attention, the exhibition resists such simple dichotomies. Far from luddites opposing technology, the exhibiting artists both use and hack, celebrate and critique, discard and invent new tools. The exhibition explores attention as a practice, as an embodied technology, and as an evolving aesthetic, social, and political sphere. In bringing attention into debates around algorithmic justice, the works in Attention After Technology pull back the curtain on the neutrality of technology, while using it to draft new ways of relating.

In the lead-up to the exhibition, which considers the intersections above, the artists participated in regular online meetings to workshop their artworks with the exhibition curators, the associated partner collective The Friends of Attention (an informal network of creative collaborators), and advisors from diverse disciplines including computer science and artificial intelligence, visual arts, and queer and transtechnology studies.

This exhibition is the last of three expressions of the expansive project, spanning over two years (2022–2024). The exhibition has travelled from Kunsthall Trondheim, Norway (13 October 2023–28 January 2024) to State of Concept Athens (24 February 2024–27 April 2024). Online versions of the artworks have been available on Tropical Papers’ web platform from November 2023. The associated symposium “The Digital Divide – Attention, Algorithms and Social Justice”, coordinated by Art Hub Copenhagen in partnership with IDA – the Danish Society of Engineers and TOASTER, took place on 4 May 2023, while Art Hub also hosted two artist residencies, with biarritzzz and CUSS Group. The overall project also includes curatorial and strategic contributions by Swiss Institute New York, USA.

The last activity of the parallel program, is an online discussion between iLiana Fokianaki (Founder
and Director of State of Concept) on the 29th of February at 18:30 CET. Zoom Link HERE

The exhibition is collectively curated by Kunsthall Trondheim’s team: Katrine Elise Agpalza Pedersen, curator and project lead “Attention After Technology” with Stefanie Hessler; Liz Dom, project manager “Attention After Technology”; Kaja Grefslie Waagen, producer and communications manager; and Art Hub Copenhagen: Lars Bang Larsen, head of art & research; Rose Tygat, project coordinator; and Tropical Papers: María Inés Rodríguez; and State of Concept Athens: iLiana Fokianaki, founder and director; Konstantina Melachrinou, production manager and press officer; and Swiss Institute New York: Stefanie Hessler, director, curatorial concept and project lead “Attention After Technology” with Katrine Elise Agpalza Pedersen.

In collaboration between Kunsthall Trondheim, Art Hub Copenhagen, Tropical Papers and Swiss Institute New York, The Friends of Attention, D. Graham Burnett (Princeton University), Justin Smith-Ruiu (Université de Paris).

ATTENTION AFTER TECHNOLOGY
Group Show

24 FEBRUARY—27 APRIL 2024

WITH
biarritzzz (Brazil), Vivian Caccuri (Brazil), Shu Lea Cheang (USA/Taiwan), Kyriaki Goni* (Greece), CUSS Group (South Africa), Femke Herregraven (Netherlands)

CURATORS
Kunsthall Trondheim, Art Hub Copenhagen, Tropical Papers, State of Concept Athens, Swiss Institute New York

*Kyriaki Goni is SNF ARTWORKS Visual Arts Fellow (2018)

ELENI BAGAKI @ LUMA ARLES

Eleni Bagaki, visual artist and SNF ARTWORKS Fellow 2020, was selected by the team of the Luma Arles Residency Program for a 3-month residency (March -May 2024) to conduct research and carry out projects related to her artistic field. During her time in Arles, Eleni Bagaki aims to explore Camargue’s biota, study the distinctive southern light depicted in historical paintings of Provence, and further her research on the representation of the male figure by examining vintage French books from the 60s and 70s.

Eleni’s residency is supported by ARTWORKS through its founding donor the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF), and as part of its ongoing collaboration with Luma Arles with the aim of sponsoring every year one residency position in France for its alumni Fellows.

Find more info here.

ARTWORKS supports the Greek participation in the 60th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia

ARTWORKS, in collaboration with its founding donor, the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF), supports the Greek participation in the 60th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, for the presentation of the interdisciplinary installation Xirómero / Dryland some members of which are SNF ARTWORKS Fellows.

Through this support, our aim is to enhance artistic creation and provide visibility to the young, dynamic, and talented individuals who have joined forces to represent the country in such an important institution for contemporary art this year.

Xirómero / Dryland is an interdisciplinary collective installation based on a concept by Thanasis Deligiannis and Yannis Michalopoulos and has been created in collaboration with Elia Kalogianni (SNF ARTWORKS Moving Image Fellow 2022), Yorgos Kyvernitis (SNF ARTWORKS Moving Image Fellow 2019), Kostas Chaikalis and Fotis Sagonas (SNF ARTWORKS Visual Arts Fellow 2018). The Greek participation has been curated by Panos Giannikopoulos (ARTWORKS’ Program Coordinator). It comprises an agricultural irrigation machine, music, moving image, soundscapes, lighting and the element of water.

The work consists of a piece of agricultural irrigation equipment which synchronizes in real time the sound, video and lighting environments that make up the installation. It investigates the experience of a village festival by following a route that leads from the village square to the borders of the surrounding farmland. More specifically, it draws upon the experience of the panighíria -local festivals- of mainland Greece, Thessaly and the area of Xirómero, in Western Greece, which lends the work its title.

Xirómero/Dryland aims to relate the situated, local experience to the global condition where aesthetic directions change, traditions shift, rural life and celebration take on different forms, whilst the political dimensions of these processes remain an open subject of inquiry.

* Xirómero (Ξηρόμερο) [ksirˈomero]: Known for its paneghíria, was a historic province of Aetolia-Acarnania. Today, it is a municipality in the Region of Western Greece.

Xirómero / Dryland | Photo ©Yorgos_Kyvernitis


Xirómero/Dryland
Pavilion of Greece at the 60th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia
April 20–November 24, 2024

Professional preview: April 17–19

Press conference: April 18, 13:30 pm, accreditation required

Pavilion of Greece– La Biennale di Venezia
Giardini
30122 Venice
Italy
Hours: Tuesday–Sunday 10am–6pm

 

Xirómero / Dryland | Photo ©Yorgos_Kyvernitis

 


Commissioner: EΜΣΤ | Νational Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens; Katerina Gregos, Artistic Director

Administrative & financial director EMΣΤ | Νational Museum of Contemporary Art Athens: Athina Ioannou

Head of production of the Greek Pavilion, ΕΜΣΤ | Νational Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens: Yannis Arvanitis

Artistic team:

Kostas Chaikalis, Thanasis Deligiannis, Elia Kalogianni, Yorgos Kyvernitis, Yiannis Michalopoulos, Fotis Sagonas

Curator: Panos Giannikopoulos

Artistic collaborators: Fotini Papachristopoulou, Studio Precarity (Vassiliki-Maria Plavou and Marios Stamatis)

Xirómero / Dryland | Yannis Michalopoulos, Thanasis Deligiannis, Elia Kalogianni, Kostas Chaikalis, Yorgos Kyvernitis, Fotis Sagonas, Panos Giannikopoulos © Yorgos Kyvernitis

The film “Persephone, the red carpet’ created by Collectif MASI and JOSHUA OLSTHOORN screened at “Mystery 176: Cinema Days”

The film Persephone, the red carpet brings to the screen Collectif MASI’s socio-mythological sculpture with and for the people of Elefsina, created in June 2023 as part of ELEVSIS 2023, European Capital of Culture. It is directed by the MASI Collective (Madlen Anipsitaki & Simon Riedler) and Joshua Olsthoorn, with financial support from the French Institutes of Greece and Paris.

Celebrated in ancient times during the Eleusinian Mysteries, Persephone, goddess of the underworld and the cycle of the seasons, is revived as a red carpet. Persephone, the red carpet appears, disappears, unfurls and wanders through contemporary Eleusis. In collective performances, to the sound of Andreas Polizogopoulos’s trumpet, she passes from foot to hand to head, from neighborhood to neighborhood. Through ritual gestures, residents from different neighborhoods and backgrounds rewrite the myth of Persephone; and the red carpet, originally an aristocratic symbol reserved for gods, becomes a symbol of equality and unity.

The Premiere of the film will take place on April 14th at 8pm at Cine ELEUSIS, Eleftheriou Venizelou 45 in Elefsina. The film, in Greek, will have English subtitles. Duration 70’.

The screening is part of the “Mystery 176: Cinema Days” in the official ELEUSIS2023 European Capital of Culture program.

Trailer:

* Μadlen Anipsitaki is SNF ARTWORKS Fellow 2020

KOSTIS CHARAMOUNTANIS’ FEATURE WORLD PREMIERS AT ACID SECTION, CANNES FESTIVAL

Kostis Charamountanis’ feature film “Kyuka – Before Summer’s End” world premieres at Cannes parallel section Acid (Association for the Distribution of Independant Cinema) !

Summertime. A family of three, a single father, Babis, and his twin children on the verge of adulthood, Konstantinos and Elsa, sail to the island of Poros on the family boat for their holidays. In the midst of swimming, sunbathing and making new friends, Konstantinos and Elsa meet unbeknownst to them, their birth mother Anna who abandoned them when they were babies. This encounter will stir up long-held feelings of resentment in Babis, resulting in a sun-kissed, bittersweet coming-of-age journey for everyone involved.

This year’s selection world premieres nine features and will be screened at Cannes Festival between May 15 and 24, 2024 at Palais des festivals, Les Arcades, Studio 13, Alexandre III.

Read the conversation between Kostis Charamountanis and Tassos Chatziefraimidis that was published at READING section on ARTWORKS website here.

*Kostis Charamountanis is SNF ARTWORKS Moving Image Fellow (2020)