Showing posts with label Athens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Athens. Show all posts

31/07/25

Charline von Heyl @ The George Economou Collection, Marousi / Athens - "The Giddy Road to Ruin" Exhibition

Charline von Heyl 
The Giddy Road to Ruin
The George Economou Collection, Marousi / Athens
14 June 2025 – March 2026

Charline von Heyl
Charline von Heyl 
The Giddy Road to Ruin, 2015
Acrylic on canvas, 62 x 54 inches (157.5 x 137 cm)
© Charline von Heyl
Courtesy of Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne and Petzel New York
Photo: Butcher Walsh

The George Economou Collection presents The Giddy Road to Ruin, the first survey exhibition by German-American artist CHARLINE VON HEYL (b. 1960) in Greece. 

Across three floors of gallery space, The Giddy Road to Ruin features select works from the last several decades. The earliest is an outstanding painting from the George Economou Collection—an emblematic example of the artist’s practice—Untitled (11/93, I) (1993), while the most recent is her first-ever photographic work, Athens, made in 2024.

The title of the exhibition, The Giddy Road to Ruin, derives from her 2015 painting of the same name and may be interpreted as a reflection of her thinking as well as the nature of painting itself. Displayed at the exhibition’s beginning and considered within the context of Greece’s ancient and modern landscape, the painting takes on greater significance, especially in relation to its presentation alongside the Athens (2024) collages. In these graphic images we experience the echoes and rumblings of both the present and history.

Charline von Heyl is one of the most significant painters of her generation. Educated in Germany in the 1980s and inspired by both senior artists and contemporaries—including Martin Kippenberger, Rosemarie Trockel, and Michael Krebber, as well as Albert Oehlen, Jutta Koether, and Cosima von Bonin—her work began to carve out new territory, particularly after her move to New York in 1996. While her paintings share the rigor and intensity of theirs, Charline von Heyl’s work eschews irony in favor of a more openly amused humor and a certain nimbleness in the synthesis of mind and hand.

Once in the United States, Charline von Heyl developed a novel, constructive, and strategic approach to creating and solving artistic problems that allows each painting to be “a self-generating machine that finds its own soul.” Her work is neither wholly abstract nor representational but simultaneously both. Her art succeeds by embracing visual and conceptual contradictions, keeping viewers intrigued by the seemingly impossible combinations of subjects, compositions, and styles that result in deeply satisfying yet puzzling works. In many of her paintings, forms appear both in stasis and in flux simultaneously, as evident in works such as Demons Dance Alone (2022) or World Rabbit Clock (2022). Shapes seem to be concurrently at the fore and in the background, as seen in her depiction of bowling pins—a recurring image in her vocabulary, particularly well-represented in two paintings from 2015 on mid-twentieth-century barkcloth fabric that are located on the second floor of the exhibition. To the indiscriminate eye, the contradictory styles in von Heyl’s paintings might seem irreconcilable, yet they all coexist within the singularly coherent universe of her art.

While a series of four densely composed paintings on barkcloth are a through line from the first floor, the appearance of two stolid and iconic works on the second floor signal a change of mood in the exhibition. The heraldic devices in Untitled (11/93, I) (1993) carry ominous, even militaristic overtones, in contrast to the insouciant black-and-white cut-out shapes of Time Waiting (2010), which harken back to mid-century travel advertisements’ filtered interpretation of Cubism. These works stand in stark contrast to the owl paintings from 2020–2021, in which the generally solitary birds—symbols of good fortune and wisdom—gather, against type, into a multitude. This capacious theme, with its potential for great and even adorable variation, offered a lighthearted interlude for Charline von Heyl to paint and for the viewer to enjoy encountering the third floor of the exhibition.

Here the opening salvo is a boldly blue bird in the large, rectangular painting Animal Delinquency (2021). Ultramarine fowl are partially obscured by two smudged-out, variegated forms of two other creatures—owls, perhaps? The collapse of subjects and the spaces they inhabit creates an apprehensive experience. The scroll-like structure of Banish Air from Air (2017) also features bird-like forms flying through interlocking patterns of words, lines, and shapes. At its center is a variation of her repeated, defiant yet playful female power figure, also seen in The Giddy Road to Ruin.

The painting Ninfa (2021) continues the subtle theme of feminine power in her work. Pulchritude is rendered as outlandish, with blue lips and a graceful line suggesting a chin overtaken by a coalescence of black and ochre biomorphic forms resembling birds. The head itself transforms into a dense field of patterns, becoming increasingly abstract. The fifteen diverse, rigorous while and whimsical black-and-white drawings that comprise Drawings Group 2 (2006) elaborate on and connect to the inscriptive elements—sometimes appearing as ideograms or Rorschach-like forms— not unlike Banish Air from Air. They also echo the structure and palette of Athens earlier in the exhibition. Each work on view is replete with such recursive connections, dissonances, and discontinuities—eye-opening and mind-boggling revelations await.

Charline von Heyl: The Giddy Road to Ruin is co-curated by Adam D. Weinberg and Skarlet Smatana, the director of The George Economou Collection, in close collaboration with the artist. A publication with essays by Adam D. Weinberg and artist Helen Marten accompanies the exhibition.

THE GEORGE ECONOMOU COLLECTION
80 Kifissias Ave, 15125 Marousi, Athens

28/07/23

Modern Love @ National Museum of Contemporary Art Athens - ΕΜΣΤ - EMEST - or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies

Modern Love
or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies
ΕΜΣΤ - EMEST - National Museum of Contemporary Art Athens
Through 5 November 2023

Marge Monko
Marge Monko
I Don't Know You So I Can't Love You, 2018 (detail)
Courtesy of the artist

Marge Monko
Marge Monko
I Don’t Know You, So I Can’t Love You, 2018 (detail)
Installation, smart assistants, speakers, pigment prints
Courtesy of the artist
Installation view: Museum für Neue Kunst, Freiburg, DE
Photo: Bernhard Strauss

Marge Monko
Marge Monko
I Don't Know You So I Can't Love You, 2018 (detail)
Courtesy of the artist 

ΕΜΣΤ | EMEST | National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens presents Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies), a major group exhibition curated by artistic director Katerina Gregos.

The subtitle of the exhibition is a reference to Eva Illouz’s book, Cold Intimacies: The Making of Emotional Capitalism, which argues that these relationships have become increasingly defined by economic and political models of bargaining, exchange, and equity. Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) explores the state of love and human bonds in the age of the Internet, social media, and high capitalism, probing how the digital sphere, the impact of technology giants, and neo-liberal practices have transformed love, social relations, and the way we interact with one another.

Gabriel Abrantes
Gabriel Abrantes
Artificial Humors, 2016 (video still)
Single channel video, colour, sound, 29’
Produced by Herma Films, with the financial support of 
Fundação de Serralves (PT), Bienal de São Paulo (BR), 
Colección Inelcom (SP), ICA - Instituto do Cinema e do Audiovisual (PT)
Courtesy of the artist and Galeria Francisco Fino, Lisbon

Gabriel Abrantes & Benjamin Crotty
Gabriel Abrantes & Benjamin Crotty
Liberdade, 2011 (video still)
Single-channel video, colour, sound, 17΄
Produced by A Mutual Respect Productions, 
with the financial support of Toyota de Angola
Courtesy of the artist and Galeria Francisco Fino, Lisbon

Candice Breitz
Candice Breitz
TLDR, 2017 (video still)
13-Channel Video Installation 
Commissioned by the B3 Biennial of  
the Moving Image, Frankfurt am Main
Courtesy of the artist

Candice Breitz
Candice Breitz
TLDR, 2017 (video still)
13-Channel Video Installation 
Commissioned by the B3 Biennial of  
the Moving Image, Frankfurt am Main
Courtesy of the artist

Melanie Bonajo
Melanie Bonajo
Night Soil - Economy of Love, 2015 (video still)
Single channel video projection, colour, sound, 32’ 46’’
Courtesy the artist and AKINCI, Amsterdam

Melanie Bonajo
Melanie Bonajo
Night Soil - Economy of Love, 2015 (video still)
Single channel video projection, colour, sound, 32’ 46’’
Courtesy the artist and AKINCI, Amsterdam

The accessibility of the Internet to an ever-greater number of people has had liberating effects, encouraging and empowering more open and diverse lifestyles, contributing to the dissolution of interpersonal orthodox conventions and social constrictions, and crumbling taboos and biases around gender and sexuality.

Laura Cemin
Laura Cemin
In Between. The warmth. 2017/2020 (detail)
Inkjet prints on Fine Art paper, variable materials
Courtesy of the artist

Marijke De Roover
Marijke De Roover
if you need me i’ll be pretending things will be different this time, 2019 
From the series Niche Content for Frustrated Queers
Meme, variable dimensions
Courtesy of the artist and Arcade, London

Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) looks at how the Internet has facilitated the expression of non-heteronormative sexual identities, especially in societies where queerness or non-binary sexuality are considered taboo, or even forbidden. It also explores the human pathologies associated with the commodification of emotion and the effects of digital dependency on relationships, as well as the issues that arise when the boundaries between the public and private, as well the virtual and the real, become more and more fluid. The Covid-19 pandemic and physical distancing have added yet another challenge to achieving fulfilling, intimate and meaningful human interaction.

Sanam Khatibi
Sanam Khatibi
Deadly Nightshade, 2020
Oil on canvas, 120 x 230 cm
From the collection of the Centraal Museum, Utrecht

Mahmoud Khaled
Mahmoud Khaled
Do You Have Work Tomorrow?, 2013 (detail)
Series of 32 screen shots of a staged conversation on an iPhone, 
transformed into black and white photographs 
developed in a dark room, framed, 18 x 13 cm (each)
Courtesy of the artist and Gypsum Gallery, Cairo

Duran Lantink
Duran Lantink
Old Stock Collection: Look 3 (Purple Vagina Face), 2019
Mixed media with silk, satin, tulle
From the collection of the Centraal Museum, Utrecht

At the same time, we also live in a time that philosopher Byung-Chul Han has labelled “emotional capitalism”, where human emotions have been co-opted by market forces. Thus, apart from offering an open and potentially endless sense of possibility, the dating supermarkets of Tinder and Grindr, “speed dating”, and the ease of Internet exchange have also hollowed out relationships and led to selfish or narcissistic forms of behaviour and the creation and curation of misleading images of the self, making it ever more difficult to establish what is real, meaningful, or true.

Ariane Loze
Ariane Loze
Our Cold Loves, 2022 (video still)
Single channel video projection, colour, sound, 32’ 31’’  
Courtesy of the artist and Michel Rein Paris | Brussels 

Ariane Loze
Ariane Loze
Our Cold Loves, 2022 (video still)
Single channel video projection, colour, sound, 32’ 31’’  
Courtesy of the artist and Michel Rein Paris | Brussels 

Maria Mavropoulou
Maria Mavropoulou
The Lovers, from the Family Portraits series, 2018
Light box, 100 x 100 cm
Courtesy of the artist

Lauren Lee McCarthy and Kyle McDonald
Lauren Lee McCarthy and Kyle McDonald
pplkpr, 2015
Software, single channel video, colour, sound, 1’ 48’’
Courtesy of the artists

Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) is as much about individuals as it is about the systems of control that bind us together. Equally, it is about new societal patterns, investigating the challenges and possibilities that the Internet and social media present. It recognises love as a potent emotional force and intense psychological bond between people that gives meaning to our lives in ways that no other interaction, object, or experience can.

Eva Papamargariti
Eva Papamargariti
Soft Touch, 2015/2022 (video still)
HD video, Color, Sound, 5΄ 
Courtesy of the artist

Yorgos Prinos
Yorgos Prinos
Man Staring, London, 2022
Pigment print, 44 x 33 cm
Courtesy of the artist and Hot Wheels, Athens

At a time of increasing alienation, individualism, and loneliness – symptoms of our world’s increasingly urbanised lifestyles – how can we reclaim meaningful intimate relationships? How can love be rescued from the claws of capitalism and the corporate technosphere? How can one resist the instrumentalisation of love, its superficialisation and banalisation by commerce and social media? Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) looks into the pathologies and problems afflicting love and matters of the heart and attempts to imagine a way out of our current alienation, emotional sterility, and loneliness.

Peter Puklus
Peter Puklus
With dog and kids in the park (Balance), Budapest, 2019 
From the series The Hero Mother – How to build a house, 2016-2019
Courtesy of the artist and Glassyard Gallery, Budapest

Margaret Salmon
Margaret Salmon
I You Me We Us, 2018
16mm film on two monitors, 16΄
Courtesy of the artist

Hannah Toticki
Hannah Toticki
Focus Wear, 2020 (installation view)
Various textiles, steel (180 x 50 x 45 cm and 170 x 55 x 45 cm)
Courtesy of the artist
Photo: Pinelopi Gerasimou

The product of ongoing research, the exhibition – which features 24 artists from 14 countries – comes to Greece after presentations at the Museum für Neue Kunst (Germany), Tallinna Kunstihoone (Estonia), IMPAKT [Centre for Media Culture] and Centraal Museum (Netherlands). For the exhibition at EMΣT - EMEST Athens, Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) has been expanded to additionally include Greek as well as international artists, most of whom are presenting their work for the first time in Greece.

Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) is accompanied by a bilingual (English-Greek) publication designed by Rafaela Drazic and edited by Katerina Gregos and Theophilos Tramboulis.

ARTISTS
Gabriel Abrantes (1984, US/PT)
Andreas Angelidakis (1968, GR)
Melanie Bonajo (1978, NI)
Candice Breitz (1978, ZA)
Laura Cemin (1992, IT)
Benjamin Crotty (1979, US)
Kyriaki Goni (GR, 1982)
David Haines (1969, UK)
Juliet Jacques (1981, UK)
Sanam Khatibi (1979, IR/BE)
Mahmoud Khaled (1982, EG)
Duran Lantink (1988, Nl)
Ariane Loze (1988, BE)
Maria Mavropoulou (1989, GR)
Lauren Lee Mccarthy (US)
Kyle Mcdonald (US)
Marge Monko (1976, EE)
Eva Papamargariti (1987, GR)
Peter Puklus (1980, RO/HU)
Yorgos Prinos (1977, GR)
Marijke De Roover (1990, BE)
Margaret Salmon (1975, US/UK)
Hannah Toticki (1984, DK)
István Zsíros (1985, HU)

ΕΜΣΤ | EMEST - National Museum of Contemporary Art
Kallirrois Ave. & Amvr. Frantzi Str. (Former Fix Factory), Athens, 11743

Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) | EMΣT Athens -  15.12.2022 - 05.11.2023

31/01/12

Damien Hirst: Spot Paintings, Gagosian Gallery exhibition in New York, London, Paris, Los Angeles, Rome, Athens, Geneva, and Hong Kong

Damien Hirst: The Complete Spot Paintings 1986-2011 Gagosian Gallery's eleven locations 
Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, through February 10, 2012 New York, London, Paris, Hong Kong, through February 18 Rome, Athens, through March 10 Geneva, through March 17, 2012

I was always a colorist, I’ve always had a phenomenal love of color… I mean, I just move color around on its own. So that’s where the spot paintings came from—to create that structure to do those colors, and do nothing. I suddenly got what I wanted. It was just a way of pinning down the joy of color.
Damien Hirst

Damien Hirst at Gagosian Gallery
© Damien Hirst/ Science Ltd, 2012 
Photography Prudence Cuming Associates

Damien Hirst: The Complete Spot Paintings 1986-2011, take place at once across all of Gagosian Gallery’s eleven locations. Most of the paintings are being lent by private individuals and public institutions, more than 150 different lenders from twenty countries. Conceived as a single exhibition in multiple locations, The Complete Spot Paintings 1986–2011 makes use of this demographic fact to determine the content of each exhibition according to locality.

Included in the exhibition are more than 300 paintings, from the first spot on board that Damien Hirst created in 1986; to the smallest spot painting comprising half a spot and measuring 1 x 1/2 inch (1996); to a monumental work comprising only four spots, each 60 inches in diameter; and up to the most recent spot painting completed in 2011 containing 25,781 spots that are each 1 millimeter in diameter, with no single color ever repeated.

PUBLICATION
The exhibition is accompagnied by the publication of The Complete Spot Paintings 1986–2011, a fully illustrated, comprehensive and definitive catalogue of all spot paintings made by Damien Hirst from 1986 to the present. Published by Gagosian Gallery and Other Criteria, The Complete Spot Paintings 1986–2011 includes essays by Museum of Modern Art curator Ann Temkin, cultural critic Michael Bracewell, and art historian Robert Pincus-Witten as well as a conversation between Damien Hirst, Ed Ruscha and John Baldessari.

The third issue of the Gagosian App for iPad providing an interactive, in-depth look at the series that features more than ninety spot paintings.

Damien Hirst: The Complete Spot Paintings 1986-2011 precedes the first major museum retrospective of Hirst’s work opening at Tate Modern in London in April, 2012.

DAMIEN HIRST was born in 1965 in Bristol, England. Solo exhibitions include "The Agony and the Ecstasy," Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli, Naples (2004); "A Selection of Works by Damien Hirst from Various Collections," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2005); Astrup Fearnley Museet for Moderne Kunst, Oslo (2005); "For the Love of God," Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam (2008); "No Love Lost," The Wallace Collection, London (2009); "Requiem," Pinchuk Art Center, Kiev (2009); and “Cornucopia,” the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco (2010). He received the Turner Prize in 1995. His work is included in many important public and private collections throughout the world. Damien Hirst lives and works in London and Devon, United Kingdom.

GAGOSIAN GALLERY

New York, NY, USA: 980 Madison Avenue & 555 West 24th Street & 522 West 21st Street - Beverly Hills, LA, USA: 456 North Camden Drive - London, UK: 6-24 Britannia Street & 17-19 Davies Street - Paris, France: 4 Rue de Ponthieu - Rome, Italy: Via Francesco Crispi 16 - Geneva, Switzerland: 19 Place de Longemalle - Athens, Greece: 3 Merlin Street - Hong Kong, China: 7/F, 12 Pedder Street