What does it signify if we have reached the end of natural landscape as we knew it? If we are entering a post-territorial reality, wherein digital, virtual, or algorithmic landscapes transcend the natural? Does Google Maps constitute a new form of geological stratum? How does one excavate a form of mediation or other remnants that seemingly have no physical substance? What does this mean for archaeological stratigraphy?
The exhibition This way the traces never die is the result of an artistic exploration that focuses on landscape as a concept but also as a material object of memory, change, and absence.
Through a series of works that function as witnesses or hybrid remnants, Athina Koumparouli constructs a narrative full of open questions about the landscape and its loss in a period of climate crisis. Matter emerges as a carrier of memory, a depository of stories, a time capsule that can provide us with information about past uses of landscape that are leading to its loss.
This exhibition’s works depict gestures that do not seek to preserve what remains, but rather seek to excavate what has vanished. Her experience as a conservator of antiquities, and specifically the conservation of an object made of plant tar, is the starting point for the exhibition. The temporal coincidence with the outbreak of fires in the period 2021–2024 led the research process towards a new direction, with the ravaged landscapes serving as case studies. Adopting archaeological methodology but transforming it into an artistic tool, the artist presents a new form of excavation that includes fragments of the landscapes she investigates. Among them, casts of burnt tree roots serve as physical records and imprints of a disaster. At the same time, three-dimensional models of tree fragments that have now been lost are composed through photogrammetry, using digital material from Google Street View. Seeking presence through absence, the exhibition maps a landscape that is both imaginary and utterly real.
The exhibition also includes archival and photographic material from the artist’s research, which is inextricably linked to her practice. The concept of absence functions as the central axis of the exhibition, not as something static, nor through the sadness of loss, but as a field of exploration for how we can encounter the landscape anew, even when we no longer see it. Ultimately, it is a search for a new relationship with the irrevocably transformed landscape.
*The text for the exhibition is written by Kyveli Mavrokordopoulou. The exhibition is accompanied by a printed publication and a video, which include textual and visual interventions by other artists and researchers. They function as a series of conversations between friends, where personal reflections compose a collective commentary on the work. (Contributors to the publication include: Peggy Zali and Panagiotis Lianos, Katerina Stamou, Alexandros Psychoulis, Vasilis Galanis. Documentation photographs by Romane Bourgeois. Video by Konstantza Kapsali).
Athina Koumparouli
This way, the traces never die
a.antonopoulou.art
20 Aristofanous str., Psyrri, 4th floor
105 54 Athens / tel. 210 3214 994
Opening: Thursday, 12/06, 7–10 p.m.
Through to 18/07/2025