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Fragments

Αlexandra
Athanassiades
Fragments
May 25, 2024 - September 30, 2024
Archaeological Museum of Poros

Alexandra Athanassiades’ works are inspired by and made of fragments. Fragments constitute an inherent starting point whether they are miscellaneous elements found in nature or intangible bits of memories. Quite often, the materials she employs, namely wood and iron, are random finds; the poetic and historical memory emerges –in a selective and fragmentary fashion– from the horses and the study of the frieze. Time and the resulting wear of the primary elements, both material and immaterial, leave distinct and familiar marks that narrate a personal story or what is left of it.
As in all Museums, the exhibits in the Archaeological Museum of Poros comprise fragments and bits from monuments and sculptures which produce an image of the distant past; it is an ancient reality, perhaps not a living one, but most certainly existent and emotively functional. The whole emerges from the parts. Τhe connective tissue with the present is woven by the monumental remnants of the distant being.
We identify the same direction in the works of Alexandra Athanassiades, but in reverse. The present recovers or even dictates the past through selected material or immaterial finds which acquire substance, life and function. They engage in a dialogue with the museum exhibits as the figments of a “fragmented” memory.

Artworks

Fragments

Αlexandra
Athanassiades
Fragments
September 9, 2017 - October 15, 2017
Poros

Memory combats decay. Alexandra Athanassiades seeks to introduce the ‘Boundaries of Decay’, to undo the critical effect of time and oblivion. She combines fragments, conjoins impressions, and evokes, gradually and sometimes imperceptibly, the resulting emotions. This exhibition presents for the first time new, two- dimensional works on paper. These are impressions, 'traces' of earlier sculptures. Through this parallel form Alexandra Athanassiades pursues a continual visual dialogue between the materials of Art and the phases of time.

Alexandra Athanassiades focusses on the fragmentary, the disconnected. Decaying matter provides her material: a piece of broken, decomposed wood, the stray part of an ancient sculpture, warped paper, the chance imprint of an older work. Her artistic creations emerge from these ingredients, which are remains or often fragments, in much the same way that human memory works—that is, disjointedly and selectively. The materials create layers and overlayers, like the phases and reminiscences of human life.

Horses and breastplates—two units—make up the basic theme of the exhibition. This coexistence almost necessarily recalls a diachronic heroic element. From the depths of antiquity, mythology, and history, from epic poetry to folk song it is possible to trace the role and symbolism of the horse: winged Pegasos, the Trojan Horse and so many others. Comrade-in-arms, fellow traveller, man’s helper and supporter, the horse expresses the harmony of body and spirit. Alexandra Athanassiades’ works record this entire trajectory, common or parallel, the coexistence of man and horse.

The breastplates are the second element that Alexandra Athanasssiades brings in from history. A defining part of the defensive arms of antiquity and the Middle Ages, the breastplate covers and protects the vital organs of the body, chiefly the heart. In these representations on paper or metal emphasis is placed on the inexorable passage of time, deterioration, inevitable closure. The human body is vulnerable; no ‘armour’, no external sheathing can protect it forever. Alexandra Athanassiades is dominated by this melancholy thought, which can be detected in the progressive evolution-transformation of the breastplate: the usual museum display, i.e. the closed, impenetrable breastplate, ‘opens up’, leaving human life exposed and unprotected.

This in fact is the basic idea behind all the works exhibited. The external covering, the shell, whether a drawing or sculpture, encases a perishable, assailable entity—personal and charged. Alexandra Athanassiades concentrates on this hidden dimension, on the inner element, which as a presence transcends the boundaries of sculpture.

Artworks