Monday 27 February 2023

Carnival - Apokries

Greece's Carnival season, known as Apokries, is upon us. It begins ten weeks before Greek Orthodox Easter and culminates on the weekend before 'Clean Monday', (Ash Monday), the first day of Lent, which is on February 27th this year. The Greek name Apokries means abstention from meat, because after that, the period of Easter Lent begins. 

It's a feast of fun celebrated all over the country with fancy dress, carnival processions and parties. This festival dates back to Dionysos, the ancient Greek god of wine, fun and fertility. 




Last Saturday we decided to go to Athens to take part in the carnival procession lead by the Batala Atenas group



which started at the foot of the Acropolis.


Lots of people watching


The band looked great, and the Brazilian music was fun as well as being very loud






We started moving off, very slowly, past the Acropolis Museum


all along Dionyssou Aeropagitou pedestrianised street




lots of kids wore fancy dress



I asked if I could take a photograph - the father of the two little girls said yes, but one of them shyly moved off and hid behind her mum. This one however nodded in agreement, so here she is



This little girl was dancing to the music - she is very good, has a natural rhythm






 A bit later we saw a guy blowing bubbles - there was a real sense of celebration everywhere





We moved on as the procession was too slow, and sat here, in the sunshine for a while, had an energy drink




and watched people going by




including this fire fighter.




 
On the way home we came across the Incredible Haulk



who enjoyed posing for us.




Saturday 25 February 2023

Another new favourite



Nicholas tis Schinousas in Glyfada is another place we like to go to. Part cafe, part restaurant, we tend to go to the restaurant as the food is very good.

The restaurant is across the road from the beach, but if you cross the road




you get to a small second structure where there is seating inside




and most importantly, tables by the sea




with excellent views of one of the small bays in Glyfada




where we can watch boats coming in, 




or winter swimmers




or views of the marina.

 

Wednesday 22 February 2023

Monday 20 February 2023

A new favourite



We have been sorely missing Skippers since it was forced to close down because the powers that be want to gentrify Alimos Marina. Fortunately, we found another place to sit and eat in the sunshine. It's the sailing club at Floisvos Marina.

These photos were taken on a sunny but cold day. We consequently ate in splendid isolation for the first part of our meal - later two more tables were taken, by tourists - it was far too cold for Greeks to sit out.




This is the view




Half-way through our meal there was activity on our left - a group of teens were getting ready to go sailing







After considerable preparations, they started the launch












All that was left in the end were the trailers.


 

Friday 17 February 2023

Nouveau Realism




Nouveau Realism 




at the Vassili and Elisa Goulandri Centre.
 
New Realism was one of the major artistic movements of the 20th century. It occured at a turning point in history when art ceased being called modern in order to become contemporary. Despite the influence of the movement and all the upheavals it gave rise to, it remains relatively unknown, even though a number of its members are now among the most famous and celebrated artists of the century: Arman, Cesar, Christo, Gerard Deschamps, Francois Dufrene, Raymond Hains, Yves Klein, Martial Raysse, Mimmo Rotella, Niki de Saint Phalle, Daniel Spoerri, Jean Tinguely and Jacques Villegle.

Nothing was off-limits for the New Realists. They found material everywhere: in garbage dumps, empty lots, hoardings and billboards, flea markets and other bazaars, supermarkets. Appropriating everyday objects, they followed in the Dada tradition, in particular Marcel Duchamp.

Why obligatorily create from the new? Why afflict to the earth with yet another creation that extracts the requisite raw materials from its entrails? Why deliberately blind ourselves to imagine an ideal world so remote from reality? These are some questions, so timely today, that the New Realists were investigating 60 years prior and that contribute to the movement's actuality. Thanks to these pioneering spirits notions like recycling, repurposing of refuse and even environmental protection were gradually introduced into art. Only Klen cannot be compared to this enselble due to the fact that his process was far removed from the necessity of drawing from pre-existent material to create.

It is furthermore unavoidable to not compare New Realism and Pop Art: the date they were founded, the desire to attack the established order, to find new means of expression, to turn their back on ubiquitous Abstration, the youthful rebellious, irreverent streak, that nevertheless masked a far deeper questioning of society in the 1950s and 1960s - artists on both continents expressed in their art the same concerns and cultivated similar aesthetic idioms.

Even so, the fundamental differences between New Realism and Pop Art extend far  beyond the movements' geographic origins. In the face of the nebulous development of the latter, New Realism distinguished itself through its well-defined approach, documentation and communication strategy. 





Niki de Saint Phalle, The Bench, 1989




Rarely do we find a Niki de Saint Phalle sculpture featuring a man rather than a woman. Peacefully seated on a bench covered in mosaics, his pet - half-dog and half-goat - at his side, our hero reads a Greek newspaper. The inscriptions were made by the artist Marina Karella, a dear friend of Saint Phalle's who also contributed to the creation of her monumental Tarot Garden in Tuscany.









Niki de Saint Phalle/Jean Tinguely, Pallas Athena or the Chariot, 1989

Of all the artist couples who have lived, worked and created together, Tinguely and Saint Phalle were undoubtedly the pair who succeeed in doing it the most freely, authentically and uncompromisingly. In 1979 Saint Phalle began building her Tarot Garden in Tuscany. With the help of Tinguely she chose for her Chariot sculpture, the seventh card in the Tarot, to represent Athena on her cart. The duo repeated the experience in 1989 with the present work that bears both their signatures.







Niki de Saint Phalle, Angel Vase, 1993




Saint Phalle joined the new Realists in 1961. Her colourfulk, curvaceous, imposing, dancing, joyful, triumphant, polyester resin sculptures represent an ode to femininity and to feminism. These Names would proceed to dominate her pictorial world contributing significantly to her international renown.





Niki de Saint Phalle, Snake Chair, 1990 (painted polyester resin)





Niki de Saint Phalle, Snake Chair, 1982 (painted polyester resin)

Saint Phalle said the following about snakes: 'For me snakes represented life itself, an untamable primitive force. By making snakes myself, I was able to transform the fear they inspired in me into joy'. She associated this reptile with the fact that her father raped her at the age of eleven -  magnified in her sculptures thus revealing the deeply therapeutic role that art played in her life.




Jacques Villegle, Untitled, 1961, (torn posters)




Raymond Hains, Diptyque, 1970, (torn posters mounted on sheet metal)




Francois Defrene, Night Livery, the Tapestry, 1965, (torn posters on canvas)





looking closer





Francois Dufrene, Bonnardery, 1960, (torn posters on paper mounted on wood)





Jacques Villegle, The underside of Rue Beaubourg, 1964, (torn posters mounted on canvas)




Christo, Package, 1963, (lacquered brown paper, rope and twine)

Of Bulgarian descent, Christo arrived in Paris in 1958 after having fled his homeland. He acclimatised quickly to his new host city, but past traumas compelled him to explore the ephemeral, the provisional and the useless. Thus, he set about wrapping all kinds of objects.





Chisto, Wrapped Perambulator, 1962, (perambulator, polythene and rope)




Martial Raysse, Pamela Beach, 1962, (xerographic painting on canvas and painted panel with earring and straw hat)




Gerard Deschamps, Flying Barney, 1985, (mixed media under plexiglass)





Martial Raysse, I really Like this Painting, 1963,  (acrylic, metal, plastic on xerography pasted on canvas)

With this work bearing a humorous and ironic title, Raysse intended to collide with the most institutional and established aspects of painting. He deliberately sought out bad taste, imperfection, flaws. 





Cesar, Expansion Chair, 1975-76, (polished and patinated bronze)

The Chair successfully combines two practices Cesar was well-versed-in: the use of found objects and expansions. Inherited from his difficult beginnings the first was for him a means of proving that it was no longer relevant to use only the so-called noble materials for sculpture. The second technique chich he had been experimenting with since 1967, celebrates the facility introduced by synthetic materials, in particular polyurethane that is so light and malleable it readily assumes any form desired.





Yves Klein, Relief Portrait of Arman, 1962, (dry pigment and synthetic resin on bronze, mounted on a panel covered with gold leaf)





Yves Klein, Untitled Blue Monochrome (IKB 233), 1957, (pure pigment and synthetic resin)

For Klein the monochrome adventure was much more than just a pictorial experience. He, who went by the moniker 'Yves the Monochrome', lived his compositions as a metaphysical practice leading him towards the purity and liberty he so longed for. Blue had pride of place in Klein's monochrome adventure because, according to him, it was the only colour that had no dimension, thus allowed for the passage from the material to the immaterial. To do this the painter invented his trademark ultramarine pigment, International Klein Blue, or IKB.





Yves Klein, The Winged Victory of Samothrace, 1962, (pure pigment and synthetic resin on plaster)




Yves Klein, Blue Venus, 1962, (dry pigment and synthetic resin on plaster)




Yves Klein, Untitled Anthropometry, 1960, (pure pigment and synthetic resin on paper)

In June 1958 Klein presented, for the first time, a work executed by a 'living brush'. A female nude model daubed herself in blue paint, then imprinted traces of her body on a sheet of white paper following the artist's directions. Works created in this manner were dubbed Anthropometries by Pierre Restany.





Yves Klein, Untitled Fire Painting, (F6), 1961, (burnt cardboard on panel)

After having worked the void, air, water and the human body, Klein was granted authorisation from the Central Research Laboratory of the National Gasworks of France to conduct his first series of Fire Paintings in March 1961. He passed a blowtorch over supports sprayed with water that blackened differently depending on where the flame made contact. This marked a turning point in Klein's pictorial quest: 'Now I want to go beyond art, beyond sensitivity, beyond Life'.





Cesar, Thumb, 1980, (polished bronze)

In 1965 the Galerie Claude Bernard invited Cesar to participate in a group exhibition on the subject of 'The Hand'. Having just recently discovered the pantograph, an instrument that allows for the reproduction of an identical sculpture and to modify its scale, he decided to duplicate his own thumb. Thus began the Empreintes series. The works presented here represent the thumb of Elise Goulandris, who was a close friend of Cesar's along with her husband Basil.






Cesar, Breast, 1966-67, (lacquered polyurethene resin)

From the Empreintes series, the Breast was cast from the bust of a dancer who performed at the Crazy Horse cabaret in Paris. Like the Thumb, the Breast would appear in a variety of dimensions and materials, even enlarged up to 50.6 metres for the steel version.





Raymond Hains, Saffa, 1971, (cut painted wood under plexiglass)




Arman, Major Chord, 1962, (sliced cello on wooden panel)





Cesar, Comrpressed Cans, 1984




Mimmo Rotella, True Love/Night Love, 2004, (decollage of torn posters mounted on canvas)




Minno Rotella, Mythical Marilyn, 1963-1989, (torn posters and plexiglass)





Gerard Deschamps, US Army Signal Tarp, 1961, (acrylic paint on tarp material under plexiglass)