JUERGEN TELLER: MACHO || DESTE FOUNDATION ||ATHENS 21.6-29.10/2014

This is the first solo show in Athens of Juergen Teller, one of the most celebrated photographers of his generation
Juergen Teller: MACHO is scheduled to open on Friday, 20 June, 7.30pm at the DESTE Foundation. The exhibition will run until 29 October.
Under the ironic title MACHO, Teller, a photographer whose practice makes the debate about the boundaries between art and fashion obsolete, will be showing for the first time in Greece a highly introspective body of work.
Teller has never been one to shy away from capturing in his peculiarly informal and often humorous pictures the plainness and beauty, averageness and extraordinariness, hardness and fragility of the human being. As a result, he is one of the few photographers who have elevated fashion photography to a new kind of artistic expression. His work, when it first appeared in magazines, was a revelation, expressing a new kind of authentic style, which has since been much imitated.
Teller is perhaps the first photographer to present his work in very different contexts without ever compromising his unique style, whether shooting for advertising campaigns, fashion editorials, billboards, magazines that found their way into the homes of a wide audience, or for exhibitions in art venues around the world. “I am just producing works and try to find channels where I can express myself,” Teller remarks: “It may be a magazine, poster, book, or billboard… whether it is art or photography, I really don’t care.”

At the core of the concept of machismo sits a pronounced – perhaps too pronounced – sense of male supremacy and pride. Teller’s choice of title for his Athens exhibition intimates a desire on his part to comment on and perhaps poke fun at the narcissistic male. Many of his pictures, including his famous self-portraits, are the result of a role-playing experiment where model and photographer swap places. Teller is seen to seamlessly slip from one role to the other, no drumroll in the background: he often photographs himself in different moments from his private life. “I rarely aim to show off my masculinity, or proclaim myself the ideal male. On the contrary, I am often to be seen in effeminate or ridiculous funny poses,” he confesses.
In his recent series, “Masculine,” included in the exhibition, pictures of classic historical examples of sculpture and painting idealizing masculinity are juxtaposed with self-portraits of the artist working out. The series offers a glimpse into how Teller himself relates to such a testosterone-packed, strength-intensive physical activity, not to mention how he, a 50something man, attempts to keep his less-than-perfect body fit.
Self-portraits are central to Teller’s work. They seem like incremental additions to an endless performance that spans his career: the photographer collapsing face down into a half-eaten platter of roast pig, or, more recently, posing in a restaurant with his crew, flaunting the imperfections of his half-naked form. And there’s more: frolicking about in an elf costume with his daughter in his family home in Germany; getting worked up watching a football match on TV, his son by his side, or standing naked by his father’s grave at night, smoking and drinking beer, one foot resting on a football.

At the same time, in a manner that is reminiscent of Diego Velázquez (and other old masters), whose painting, Las Meninas, depicts the painter at work, Teller creates a series of photographs in which the photographer is never far from the foreground. Shots for the Marc Jacobs campaign – of Sofia Copolla in a swimming pool looking across at Teller who includes his feet in the frame, or his famous self-portraits with Charlotte Rampling in which the two are seen canoodling in a hotel room – are indicative of this approach.
Teller, one of the iconic photographers of his generation, entered the London photography scene through his work on music album covers. He is the author of famous portraits of such music icons as Kurt Cobain, Bjorg, and Sinéad O’Connor, who was photographed by Teller for the cover of her single Nothing Compares 2 You. Numerous celebrities feature in his work for major fashion designers, while his photographs have been published in fashion magazines and shown in many museums around the world. He has published more than twenty monographs of his work.
In reality, Teller needs no introduction. His photographs have fuelled the fantasies of an entire generation. He is the photographer who managed with his amateur 35 mm camera, in hand and no digital manipulation whatsoever to prove that beauty truly is in the eye (and soul) of the beholder. The only difference being that the beholder here is no other than Teller himself: a beholder of life!

Image

 

Source: Deste Foundation Athens

This is the first solo show in Athens of Juergen Teller, one of the most celebrated photographers of his generation

Juergen Teller: MACHO is scheduled to open on Friday, 20 June, 7.30pm at the DESTE Foundation. The exhibition will run until 29 October.

Under the ironic title MACHO, Teller, a photographer whose practice makes the debate about the boundaries between art and fashion obsolete, will be showing for the first time in Greece a highly introspective body of work.

Teller has never been one to shy away from capturing in his peculiarly informal and often humorous pictures the plainness and beauty, averageness and extraordinariness, hardness and fragility of the human being. As a result, he is one of the few photographers who have elevated fashion photography to a new kind of artistic expression. His work, when it first appeared in magazines, was a revelation, expressing a new kind of authentic style, which has since been much imitated.

Teller is perhaps the first photographer to present his work in very different contexts without ever compromising his unique style, whether shooting for advertising campaigns, fashion editorials, billboards, magazines that found their way into the homes of a wide audience, or for exhibitions in art venues around the world. “I am just producing works and try to find channels where I can express myself,” Teller remarks: “It may be a magazine, poster, book, or billboard… whether it is art or photography, I really don’t care.”

At the core of the concept of machismo sits a pronounced – perhaps too pronounced – sense of male supremacy and pride. Teller’s choice of title for his Athens exhibition intimates a desire on his part to comment on and perhaps poke fun at the narcissistic male. Many of his pictures, including his famous self-portraits, are the result of a role-playing experiment where model and photographer swap places. Teller is seen to seamlessly slip from one role to the other, no drumroll in the background: he often photographs himself in different moments from his private life. “I rarely aim to show off my masculinity, or proclaim myself the ideal male. On the contrary, I am often to be seen in effeminate or ridiculous funny poses,” he confesses.

In his recent series, “Masculine,” included in the exhibition, pictures of classic historical examples of sculpture and painting idealizing masculinity are juxtaposed with self-portraits of the artist working out. The series offers a glimpse into how Teller himself relates to such a testosterone-packed, strength-intensive physical activity, not to mention how he, a 50something man, attempts to keep his less-than-perfect body fit.
Self-portraits are central to Teller’s work. They seem like incremental additions to an endless performance that spans his career: the photographer collapsing face down into a half-eaten platter of roast pig, or, more recently, posing in a restaurant with his crew, flaunting the imperfections of his half-naked form. And there’s more: frolicking about in an elf costume with his daughter in his family home in Germany; getting worked up watching a football match on TV, his son by his side, or standing naked by his father’s grave at night, smoking and drinking beer, one foot resting on a football.

At the same time, in a manner that is reminiscent of Diego Velázquez (and other old masters), whose painting, Las Meninas, depicts the painter at work, Teller creates a series of photographs in which the photographer is never far from the foreground. Shots for the Marc Jacobs campaign – of Sofia Copolla in a swimming pool looking across at Teller who includes his feet in the frame, or his famous self-portraits with Charlotte Rampling in which the two are seen canoodling in a hotel room – are indicative of this approach.

Teller, one of the iconic photographers of his generation, entered the London photography scene through his work on music album covers. He is the author of famous portraits of such music icons as Kurt Cobain, Bjorg, and Sinéad O’Connor, who was photographed by Teller for the cover of her single Nothing Compares 2 You. Numerous celebrities feature in his work for major fashion designers, while his photographs have been published in fashion magazines and shown in many museums around the world. He has published more than twenty monographs of his work.

In reality, Teller needs no introduction. His photographs have fuelled the fantasies of an entire generation. He is the photographer who managed with his amateur 35 mm camera, in hand and no digital manipulation whatsoever to prove that beauty truly is in the eye (and soul) of the beholder. The only difference being that the beholder here is no other than Teller himself: a beholder of life!

– See more at: http://deste.gr/exhibition/juergen-teller/#sthash.MVBDauzL.dpuf

This is the first solo show in Athens of Juergen Teller, one of the most celebrated photographers of his generation

Juergen Teller: MACHO is scheduled to open on Friday, 20 June, 7.30pm at the DESTE Foundation. The exhibition will run until 29 October.

Under the ironic title MACHO, Teller, a photographer whose practice makes the debate about the boundaries between art and fashion obsolete, will be showing for the first time in Greece a highly introspective body of work.

Teller has never been one to shy away from capturing in his peculiarly informal and often humorous pictures the plainness and beauty, averageness and extraordinariness, hardness and fragility of the human being. As a result, he is one of the few photographers who have elevated fashion photography to a new kind of artistic expression. His work, when it first appeared in magazines, was a revelation, expressing a new kind of authentic style, which has since been much imitated.

Teller is perhaps the first photographer to present his work in very different contexts without ever compromising his unique style, whether shooting for advertising campaigns, fashion editorials, billboards, magazines that found their way into the homes of a wide audience, or for exhibitions in art venues around the world. “I am just producing works and try to find channels where I can express myself,” Teller remarks: “It may be a magazine, poster, book, or billboard… whether it is art or photography, I really don’t care.”

At the core of the concept of machismo sits a pronounced – perhaps too pronounced – sense of male supremacy and pride. Teller’s choice of title for his Athens exhibition intimates a desire on his part to comment on and perhaps poke fun at the narcissistic male. Many of his pictures, including his famous self-portraits, are the result of a role-playing experiment where model and photographer swap places. Teller is seen to seamlessly slip from one role to the other, no drumroll in the background: he often photographs himself in different moments from his private life. “I rarely aim to show off my masculinity, or proclaim myself the ideal male. On the contrary, I am often to be seen in effeminate or ridiculous funny poses,” he confesses.

In his recent series, “Masculine,” included in the exhibition, pictures of classic historical examples of sculpture and painting idealizing masculinity are juxtaposed with self-portraits of the artist working out. The series offers a glimpse into how Teller himself relates to such a testosterone-packed, strength-intensive physical activity, not to mention how he, a 50something man, attempts to keep his less-than-perfect body fit.
Self-portraits are central to Teller’s work. They seem like incremental additions to an endless performance that spans his career: the photographer collapsing face down into a half-eaten platter of roast pig, or, more recently, posing in a restaurant with his crew, flaunting the imperfections of his half-naked form. And there’s more: frolicking about in an elf costume with his daughter in his family home in Germany; getting worked up watching a football match on TV, his son by his side, or standing naked by his father’s grave at night, smoking and drinking beer, one foot resting on a football.

At the same time, in a manner that is reminiscent of Diego Velázquez (and other old masters), whose painting, Las Meninas, depicts the painter at work, Teller creates a series of photographs in which the photographer is never far from the foreground. Shots for the Marc Jacobs campaign – of Sofia Copolla in a swimming pool looking across at Teller who includes his feet in the frame, or his famous self-portraits with Charlotte Rampling in which the two are seen canoodling in a hotel room – are indicative of this approach.

Teller, one of the iconic photographers of his generation, entered the London photography scene through his work on music album covers. He is the author of famous portraits of such music icons as Kurt Cobain, Bjorg, and Sinéad O’Connor, who was photographed by Teller for the cover of her single Nothing Compares 2 You. Numerous celebrities feature in his work for major fashion designers, while his photographs have been published in fashion magazines and shown in many museums around the world. He has published more than twenty monographs of his work.

In reality, Teller needs no introduction. His photographs have fuelled the fantasies of an entire generation. He is the photographer who managed with his amateur 35 mm camera, in hand and no digital manipulation whatsoever to prove that beauty truly is in the eye (and soul) of the beholder. The only difference being that the beholder here is no other than Teller himself: a beholder of life!

– See more at: http://deste.gr/exhibition/juergen-teller/#sthash.MVBDauzL.dpuf

This is the first solo show in Athens of Juergen Teller, one of the most celebrated photographers of his generation

Juergen Teller: MACHO is scheduled to open on Friday, 20 June, 7.30pm at the DESTE Foundation. The exhibition will run until 29 October.

Under the ironic title MACHO, Teller, a photographer whose practice makes the debate about the boundaries between art and fashion obsolete, will be showing for the first time in Greece a highly introspective body of work.

Teller has never been one to shy away from capturing in his peculiarly informal and often humorous pictures the plainness and beauty, averageness and extraordinariness, hardness and fragility of the human being. As a result, he is one of the few photographers who have elevated fashion photography to a new kind of artistic expression. His work, when it first appeared in magazines, was a revelation, expressing a new kind of authentic style, which has since been much imitated.

Teller is perhaps the first photographer to present his work in very different contexts without ever compromising his unique style, whether shooting for advertising campaigns, fashion editorials, billboards, magazines that found their way into the homes of a wide audience, or for exhibitions in art venues around the world. “I am just producing works and try to find channels where I can express myself,” Teller remarks: “It may be a magazine, poster, book, or billboard… whether it is art or photography, I really don’t care.”

At the core of the concept of machismo sits a pronounced – perhaps too pronounced – sense of male supremacy and pride. Teller’s choice of title for his Athens exhibition intimates a desire on his part to comment on and perhaps poke fun at the narcissistic male. Many of his pictures, including his famous self-portraits, are the result of a role-playing experiment where model and photographer swap places. Teller is seen to seamlessly slip from one role to the other, no drumroll in the background: he often photographs himself in different moments from his private life. “I rarely aim to show off my masculinity, or proclaim myself the ideal male. On the contrary, I am often to be seen in effeminate or ridiculous funny poses,” he confesses.

In his recent series, “Masculine,” included in the exhibition, pictures of classic historical examples of sculpture and painting idealizing masculinity are juxtaposed with self-portraits of the artist working out. The series offers a glimpse into how Teller himself relates to such a testosterone-packed, strength-intensive physical activity, not to mention how he, a 50something man, attempts to keep his less-than-perfect body fit.
Self-portraits are central to Teller’s work. They seem like incremental additions to an endless performance that spans his career: the photographer collapsing face down into a half-eaten platter of roast pig, or, more recently, posing in a restaurant with his crew, flaunting the imperfections of his half-naked form. And there’s more: frolicking about in an elf costume with his daughter in his family home in Germany; getting worked up watching a football match on TV, his son by his side, or standing naked by his father’s grave at night, smoking and drinking beer, one foot resting on a football.

At the same time, in a manner that is reminiscent of Diego Velázquez (and other old masters), whose painting, Las Meninas, depicts the painter at work, Teller creates a series of photographs in which the photographer is never far from the foreground. Shots for the Marc Jacobs campaign – of Sofia Copolla in a swimming pool looking across at Teller who includes his feet in the frame, or his famous self-portraits with Charlotte Rampling in which the two are seen canoodling in a hotel room – are indicative of this approach.

Teller, one of the iconic photographers of his generation, entered the London photography scene through his work on music album covers. He is the author of famous portraits of such music icons as Kurt Cobain, Bjorg, and Sinéad O’Connor, who was photographed by Teller for the cover of her single Nothing Compares 2 You. Numerous celebrities feature in his work for major fashion designers, while his photographs have been published in fashion magazines and shown in many museums around the world. He has published more than twenty monographs of his work.

In reality, Teller needs no introduction. His photographs have fuelled the fantasies of an entire generation. He is the photographer who managed with his amateur 35 mm camera, in hand and no digital manipulation whatsoever to prove that beauty truly is in the eye (and soul) of the beholder. The only difference being that the beholder here is no other than Teller himself: a beholder of life!

– See more at: http://deste.gr/exhibition/juergen-teller/#sthash.MVBDauzL.dpuf

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

October 24, 2014–March 29, 2015

Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, 4th Floor

Judith Scott’s work is celebrated for its astonishing visual complexity. In a career spanning just seventeen years, Scott developed a unique and idiosyncratic method to produce a body of work of remarkable originality. Often working for weeks or months on individual pieces, she used yarn, thread, fabric, and other fibers to envelop found objects into fastidiously woven, wrapped, and bundled structures.

Born in Columbus, Ohio, with Down syndrome, Scott (1943–2005) was also largely deaf and did not speak. After thirty-five years living within an institutional setting  for people with disabilities, she was introduced in 1987 to Creative Growth Art Center—a visionary studio art program founded more than forty years ago in Oakland, California, to foster and serve a community of artists with developmental and physical disabilities.

As the first comprehensive U.S. survey of Scott’s work, this retrospective exhibition includes an overview of three-dimensional objects spanning the artist’s career as well as a selection of works on paper.

Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound is organized by Catherine J. Morris, Sackler Family Curator for the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, Brooklyn Museum, and Matthew Higgs, artist and Director/Chief Curator of White Columns, New York. The accompanying catalogue is published by the Brooklyn Museum and Prestel.

This exhibition is made possible by the Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation. Additional generous support has been provided by the Helene Zucker Seeman Memorial Exhibition Fund.

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Brooklyn Museum || Exhibition: Judith Scott—Bound and Unbound || until 29.03.2015

Image

Judith Scott (American, 1943‒2005). Untitled, 2004. Fiber and found objects, 28 x 15 x 27 in. (71.1 x 38.1 x 68.6 cm). The Smith-Nederpelt Collection. © Creative Growth Art Center. (Photo: © Brooklyn Museum)

Source: Brooklyn Museum

The Acropolis Museum celebrates its fifth birthday on 20 June 2014

On the occasion of its fifth birthday on Friday 20 June 2014, the Acropolis Museum will commence an ambitious digital restoration program of the Parthenon sculptures. Horse riders of the west frieze will be presented in 3D digital images with additions of copper weapons and bridles, with alternating light and color testing.

On this day, the exhibition areas will remain open from 8 a.m. until 12 midnight. The restaurant will be open during the same hours. On this occasion, admission to the Museum will be reduced (3 euros) for all visitors.

At 9:30 p.m., the Museum will present a music concert in its entrance courtyard of the famous artist Leon of Athens. Visitors will have the chance to listen to their favorite songs from the two albums released so far (‘Futrue’ and ‘Global’), but also remixes of popular songs of the international discography.

Image

Horse riders of the west Parthenon frieze.

 

Source: The Acropolis Museum

 

Το Μουσείο Ακρόπολης γίνεται 5 ετών στις 20 Ιουνίου 2014

Με την συμπλήρωση του πέμπτου έτους λειτουργίας του την Παρασκευή 20 Ιουνίου 2014, το Μουσείο Ακρόπολης ξεκινά ένα φιλόδοξο πρόγραμμα ψηφιακής αποκατάστασης των γλυπτών του Παρθενώνα. Την ημέρα των γενεθλίων του θα παρουσιαστούν οι ιππείς της δυτικής ζωφόρου σε τρισδιάστατες ψηφιακές εικόνες με προσθήκες χάλκινων όπλων και χαλινών, με εναλλασσόμενο φωτισμό και δοκιμαστικό χρωματισμό.

Την ημέρα αυτή οι εκθεσιακοί χώροι και το εστιατόριο του Μουσείου θα παραμείνουν ανοιχτά από τις 8 το πρωί έως τα μεσάνυχτα και η είσοδος θα είναι μειωμένη (3 ευρώ) για όλους.

Το ίδιο βράδυ, στις 9:30 μ.μ., το Μουσείο θα γιορτάσει στο προαύλιο με συναυλία του δημοφιλούς καλλιτέχνη Leon of Athens. Οι επισκέπτες θα έχουν την ευκαιρία να ακούσουν αγαπημένα τραγούδια από τους δύο δίσκους που έχει κυκλοφορήσει μέχρι σήμερα (‘Futrue’ και ‘Global’) αλλά και διασκευές γνωστών τραγουδιών από τη διεθνή δισκογραφία.

Image

Οι ιππείς της δυτικής ζωφόρου του Παρθενώνα.

Πηγή: Μουσείο Ακρόπολης

 

“Andy Warhol Pop Art for Everyone” at Pera Museum Istanbul

Suna and İnan Kıraç Foundation Pera Museum is pleased to announce its new spring exhibition Andy Warhol: Pop Art for Everyone. The exhibition is composed of selected works of Andy Warhol from the Zoya Museum Private Collection in Slovakia, Modra. Included in the show are silkscreen series and drawings exhibited for the first time in Turkey, iconic works such as Campbell’s Soup, Cowboys and Indians, Endangered Species, and Flowers, accompanied by portraits of well-known important figures.

Andy Warhol’s (1928–1987) artistic productivity was vast and impressive. More than twenty years after his death, Andy Warhol remains one of the most influential figures in contemporary art and culture. Warhol’s life and work inspires creative thinkers worldwide thanks to his enduring imagery, his artfully cultivated celebrity, and the ongoing research of dedicated scholars. His impact as an artist is far deeper and greater than his one prescient observation that “everyone will be world famous for fifteen minutes.” His omnivorous curiosity resulted in an enormous body of work that spanned every available medium and most importantly contributed to the collapse of boundaries between high and low culture.

Andy Warhol’s manner, clothes, hair color, gestures; all were as significant as the works he created and the life he led. The concept that he ultimately triggered and crafted, of “artist as machine,” operating mechanically both in the selection of his symbol and in the process of replicating it, emphasized the ordinariness, even banality of his actions. Nevertheless, his aspiration to play the role of a great artist remains undisputable.

Image

Source: Pera Museum Istanbul

“No Respect”: Graffiti και street art στη Στέγη

Η Στέγη διοργανώνει σε κλειστό χώρο μία έκθεση-καταγραφή της ελληνικής graffiti & street art σκηνής, όπως αυτή αποτυπώνεται σήμερα στους δρόμους της Αθήνας και άλλων μεγάλων πόλεων της Ελλάδας.
Τα σαράντα έργα που θα δημιουργηθούν επί τόπου και θα καλύψουν τους τοίχους, τις κολώνες, το δάπεδο του εκθεσιακού χώρου, αλλά και τα αυτοκίνητα που θα τοποθετηθούν μέσα σε αυτόν, ανήκουν σε ισάριθμους graffiti και street artists, οι οποίοι προέκυψαν μέσα από έναν μεγάλο αριθμό συμμετοχών από καλλιτέχνες που ανταποκρίθηκαν στην ανοικτή πρόσκληση ενδιαφέροντος της Στέγης.
Μέσα στον χώρο της έκθεσης θα προβάλλεται making of video υλοποίησης των έργων.
Η έκθεση θα συνοδεύεται από κατάλογο με φωτογραφικό υλικό των έργων και με πληροφορίες για τους καλλιτέχνες.

Επιμέλεια έκθεσης: Μαριλένα Β. Καρρά

Συμμετέχουν οι:
ACHILLES • AIVA • ALEX MARTINEZ • APSET • ATH1281 • BILLY GEE • BILOS • BIZ 360 • CACAO ROCKS • DOKOS DIMITRIS • DON40 • EX!T • EZION • FOLA CREW • FORS • IKEAR • INO • JASONE • JOLA • KERT • LINARDAKI – PARISOT • NAR • NOBLE ROT • RTMONE • SAME84 • SENOR • SHK CREW • SHUEN • SIMEK • SINKE • STMTS • THEOPSY • THINK • THIS IS OPIUM • WD • YIAKOU • ZAMIE • ZEK • ZOFOS • ZOTA • Π

 

Πηγή: Στέγη Γραμμάτων και Τεχνών ~ Ίδρυμα Ωνάση

 

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros || Exhibition: Sofia Vari || until 28.09.2014

Sophia Vari, an internationally renowned Greek artist with a multicultural art education began her career as a figurative painter, eventually turning to sculpture in the mid-80s where she would excel. Vari remained independent throughout her career, never following any particular school of thought or practice, or joining any art movements, steering clear of established beliefs, and engaging in a bold and passionate quest for models she might be inspired from to create her very personal universe of forms.    

Apart from a large and varied sample of her work in sculpture that is to serve as the exhibit’s main axis, the proposed tribute to her work will include drawings, watercolors, oils, reliefs, and collages, as well as microsculptures.

The exhibition hopes to make manifest the manifold transformations of form and concept that the artist ingeniously invents and gives shape to through her sustained and highly original dialogue with form.

The exhibition’s catalogue will be published by SKIRA.

Opening hours: Wednesday-Sunday 11:00-15:00 and 18:00-21:00,

       Monday 11:00-15:00, Tuesday: closed 

 

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros
Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros
Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros
Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros
Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros
Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros
Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros Sofia Vari Exhibition

Museum of Contemporary Art Andros
Sofia Vari Exhibition

Πηγή:  Museum of Contemporary Art Andros