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Asterisks in my mouth

Myrto
Xanthopoulou
Asterisks in my mouth
February 27 – March 29, 2025
Athens

CITRONNE Gallery – Athens presents the solo exhibition-installation "Asterisks in my Mouth" by Myrto Xanthopoulou. “The asterisks that reside in the mouth are only a few millimeters away from the light and a few millimeters away from the darkness.” This is how Myrto Xanthopoulou explains the title of her exhibition.

Language serves as the conceptual and tangible foundation of her works—whether implicitly or as a direct record of a living expression, yet without a coherent thread. It is, therefore, an explicit language, a composition of scattered sounds and images—elements that immerse the viewer in the structured “confusion” of our times. At the same time, there is a visible effort, at times even a struggle, to find meaning between the two lived languages (Finnish and Greek) that have shaped the artist’s identity.

Artworks

Dimitris Anastasiou designs the posters for the 27th TiDF

Dimitris Anastasiou designs the posters for the 27th TiDF
14.02.2025

The visual identity of the 27th Thessaloniki International Documentary Festival, set to begin on March 6, has been unveiled with the presentation of posters designed by Dimitris Anastasiou.

The figures portrayed in the three paintings that make up the posters of the 27th Thessaloniki International Documentary Festival embark on a journey across the Greek landscape, but also to the cities of the future. Without us ever taking a glance on their faces, the people in the Festival’s posters look ahead, towards what is coming up next. The three paintings converse with the tributes and the thematics of this year’s Festival. In the artist’s words: “The three paintings compose a three-fold narrative. If placed aligned, each serves as a continuation of the previous one. The two first (that depict a field of land and a provincial Greek town of the 1960s) allude to the Greek landscape. The third one (that portrays an absurd and imaginary city, whether utopian or dystopian) nods to Artificial Intelligence. Viewers, like time travelers, move within these landscapes.”

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Dimitris Anastasiou's posters view

A Cabinet of Curiosities at MOMus: Works by Christina Mitrentse, Pantelis Chandris, Panos Charalambous

A Cabinet of Curiosities at MOMus: Works by Christina Mitrentse, Pantelis Chandris, Panos Charalambous
12.02.2025

A Cabinet of Curiosities: The first 2025 production of MOMus - Museum Alex Mylona, curated by Yannis Bolis, featuring 78 artists, including Christina Mitrentse, Pantelis Chandris, Panos Charalambous.

The unexpected, the ambiguous and the enigmatic, the imaginary and the grotesque act as a conceptual and spatial grid for the exhibition entitled "a Cabinet of Curiosities" presented at MOMus - Museum Alex Mylona, from 13 February to 31 August 2025. The periodical exhibitions’ space of the Museum in Thissio, Athens, is “conquered” by paintings, prints, sculptures, constructions and videos ‒works remarkably diverse in style, materials, qualities, sensitivities, visual values and aesthetic preferences‒ created by 78 artists.

Emerging in Europe during the Renaissance, cabinets of curiosities came to be identified with a collecting frenzy, aesthetic pleasure and amazement through their wondrous and rare exhibits: these ranged from works of art andrelics to strange and “exotic” artifacts from distant cultures, alongside scientific tools and instruments, objects from the natural world, and items related to medicine, zoology, botany, gemology, mineralogy, and astrology, as well as to the realms of the occult, alchemy, and magic. These cabinets, which can be considered precursors to modern museums, played a pivotal role in shaping Western perceptions of the "other", while also offering an aesthetic, social, anthropological and political space wirh numerous benefits of research.

In the modern, extended Cabinet of Curiosities at MOMus-Museum Alex Mylona, in a multiple connection of images and realities, the exhibits cover a broad thematic spectrum, opening portals to different worlds, times, and regions. The stories they tell, inventive and original, explore concepts such as life and death, nature and technology, vanity and paradox, violence and threat, myth and dream, erotic desire and libido.

The exhibition "a Cabinet of Curiosities" functions as a proposal-challenge for a modern, new "cabinet" which, although apparently creates the fear of emptiness (horror vacui), can nevertheless function as a starting point for a new consideration of the present we live in.

Curated by: Yannis Bolis, Art historian, Head of Department of Contemporary Sculpture, MOMus - Museum Alex Mylona

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Opening: 13.02.2025, 17:00-21:00 - Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 10:00-18:00, Thursday: 10:00-21:00 - MOMus - Museum Alex Mylona, Agion Asomaton Sq 5, 105 54 Athens

Steve Gianakos in the 7-day group exhibition Ephemeral Party

Steve Gianakos in the 7-day group exhibition Ephemeral Party
07.02.2025

Curated by Philippos Tsagkridis Panagopoulos and Katerina Chatzi, Steve Gianakos' work will be showcased for seven days (February 11 - February 17, 2025) alongside works by artists from different fields and generations at the newly inaugurated Carco Parking.

Carco Parking, just before commencing its operation, is hosting the group art exhibition Ephemeral Party - the first and last exhibition ever to be held in this space. The Ephemeral Party exhibition redefines an everyday public space into an active hub for encounters. Showcasing 19 artists across various media and materials (painting, sculpture, video, installations, performance art), it explores the fleeting nature of life through the lens of dreams, time, and memories. Emblematic works by Giorgos Bouzianis and Yannis Tsarouchis, alongside a poem by Constantine P. Cavafy are brought into dialogue with modern and contemporary artists from both the local and international art scenes.

The exhibition Ephemeral Party originated as an exploration of fundamental questions about art’s potential to integrate into daily life. Set within a parking, it reinterprets a non-traditional venue as an artistic context, reinforcing the idea that art belongs everywhere: it is unrestricted, inclusive, and accessible to all. Spanning three subterranean levels, the space itself becomes an essential part of the exhibition, amplifying its impact. Visitors are invited to wander through the site and discover works that are "hidden" in unexpected corners.

Concept: Philippos Tsangrides Panagopoulos
Curated by: Philippos Tsangrides Panagopoulos & Katerina Hadji

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Steve Giannakos, My Place is Real Tiny, 1985, acrylics on canvas,162.6x137.2 cm, Irene Panagopoulos Collection.