New
Museum
Past

Offsite: New Museum and the DESTE Foundation at the Benaki Museum in Athens

06/21/19-09/22/19

The New Museum and the DESTE Foundation, in collaboration with the Benaki Museum, Athens, present “The Same River Twice,” an exhibition of Athens-based artists.

Cover Image:

Eva Giannakopoulou, At the Beach 3, 2019 (still). Video. Courtesy the artist.

Benaki Museum Pireos, Athens Get Directions

The exhibition, which opened at the Benaki Museum Pireos in June 2019, focuses on the city of Athens and its constantly evolving artistic landscape, which is host to countless artist-run initiatives and exhibition spaces, cross-disciplinary happenings and collaborations, and a dauntless energy that has enticed many non-Greek artists to relocate and call Athens home. Featuring over thirty artists of all ages and nationalities, working across all mediums, the exhibition offers a portrait of a city with an artistic dynamism that continues to unfold as artists seek new models for creative output and exchange.

“The Same River Twice” borrows its title from an aphorism attributed to the Greek philosopher Heraclitus, in which he famously asserted that “one cannot step in the same river twice.” The flow of water offered an apt analogy for the state of constant flux Heraclitus sought to describe, and it applies to the continuous transformations of Athens’s art scene today—and the inherent impossibility of capturing or containing it at any given moment. As a city, Athens is in perpetual transformation, and its artists have long found ways to document its shifting landscapes, whether through visual or material studies of the city’s attributes; meditations on its monuments, relics, and cast-offs; or inquiries into the character of its people and public spaces. Metamorphoses are central to many works in the exhibition: mediums defy stability and trace modulations in form, and artistic practices blur the lines between genres or disciplines. The fluidity evoked by Heraclitus’s metaphor offers a way of thinking of identity at a time when the political struggle of those seeking to define their gender or sexuality is both turbulent and vital in Greece and worldwide. Throughout the works in the exhibition, change and transfiguration are not only constant but embraced, resonating as fundamental to the energy and character that shapes Athens and its many artists.

The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue, designed by An Art Service, featuring an essay by the curators as well as texts by Nadja Argyropoulou, Danai Giannoglou, Delia Gonzalez, and Theophilos Tramboulis. Their contributions aim to collectively establish a resource on Athens’s multifaceted art scene—from underground happenings and activist orientations to the rise of artist-run spaces and the critical realm of self-published art zines and journals.

“The Same River Twice” follows the 2016 exhibition “The Equilibrists,” which was also organized by the New Museum and DESTE Foundation and was conceived in the spirit of the DESTE Prize, an award given to a promising young Greek artist biannually from 1999 to 2017. The exhibition also embodies one of the aims of the Benaki Museum, a historical museum that aims to bridge the past and the present, and aligns with the New Museum’s commitment to exhibiting emerging artists from around the globe, highlighted by its signature Triennial exhibition, which will be held again in 2021.

Visit deste.gr for more information.

Participants:

Eleni Christodoulou
Anastasia Douka
Pavlos Fysakis
Eva Giannakopoulou
Delia Gonzalez
Lakis & Aris Ionas / The Callas
Evi Kalogiropoulou
Dionisis Kavallieratos
Navine G. Khan-Dossos
Katerina Komianou
Panayiotis Loukas
Petros Moris
Rallou Panagiotou
Angelos Papadimitriou
Vasilis Papageorgiou
Rena Papaspyrou
Eftihis Patsourakis
Anastasia Pavlou
Yorgos Prinos
Kostas Sahpazis
Socratis Socratous
Eva Stefani
Valinia Svoronou
Iris Touliatou
Dimitris Tsouanatos
Alexandros Tzannis
Amalia Vekri
Nikolas Ventourakis
Vangelis Vlahos
Eirini Vourloumis
Neritan Zinxhiria

This exhibition is curated by Margot Norton and Natalie Bell.

Continue Reading

Get Updates

We want to hear from you!

Help us improve our website by taking a 5-minute survey with a chance to win $100!

Take Survey
Back to mobile site