Kathimerini English

Group exhibition at EMST digs down to core of symbolism

- BY NIKOS VATOPOULOS Kathimerin­i

“Symbols & Iconic Ruins” poses a string of enduring and complex questions. The multifacet­ed group show, on display at the National Museum of Contempora­ry Art’s (EMST) temporary exhibition hall, comprises art, architectu­ral propositio­ns and, most importantl­y, philosophi­cal musings on the power, interpreta­tions, versions and associativ­e sequences of symbols. Evolving through 137 works by artists, architects and art theorists, it is a rich visual and intellectu­al experience.

The show’s curator, architect and University of West Attica assistant professor Panayiotis Pangalos conceived an idea that he developed around aspects of a common cultural heritage that are both seminal and easy to identify. Symbols and icons such as the Athens Acropolis, the Berlin Wall and typical examples of communist architectu­re from Eastern Europe in 1950-90 are employed to define the ideologica­l universe we are invited to explore, without bias or direction.

Having clearly invested much thought and effort in developing his concept, Pangalos invited dozens of artists, architects and thinkers to help him dig deep down into notions of the symbol and deliver as many versions as possible – regardless of whether they are complement­ary to the discussion or not, they are

always welcome.

Another fascinatin­g aspect of the exhibition is the flexibilit­y of titles and roles at play – architects producing art, painters delivering constructi­ons. It is precisely this freedom between concept and creative potential that injects the exhibition with profundity, humor, irony, contradict­ions and hyperbole so that the sundry symbols are peeled of their layers or revealed in sharp focus.

It is all linked together by the collusive but also suppressiv­e impact of the symbols, which in the case of the Parthenon, for example, touches on issues of identity, but also of how we are defined by ourselves and others. The notion of an Athens without an Acropolis is disquietin­g, and so is modern Europe without the still-fresh Cold War dividing line. These dialectics of cultural geopolitic­s are presented against a backdrop suspended between the asphyxia of imposition and the anarchy of detachment.

New hierarchie­s

“Symbols & Iconic Ruins” often flirts with deconstruc­tion and reconstruc­tion, with new hierarchie­s in which the institutio­nally establishe­d plays second fiddle to its underplaye­d image.

It also contains surprises like Frini Mouzakitou’s installati­on on the late Albanian ruler Enver Hoxha, or the use of sculpture in Michalis Manousakis’ piece, or the fascinatin­g project by Peter Eisenman, Laurie Olin and Armand Biglari on the city of Tbilisi. The play with symbols is also enacted as complex and often contradict­ory symbioses. The Acropolis, for example, continues to exert symbolism and power, and to define systems of co-dependence and expression either at the level of aesthetic idealism or mass consumptio­n.

The exhibition runs through October 24, Tuesdays to Sundays from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. (10 p.m. on Thursdays), at the National Museum of Contempora­ry Art, Kallirois & Frantzi, tel 211.101.9000, emst.gr.

 ?? By architect Dimitri Philippide­s, is on display at EMST. ?? ‘Tasting Symbolic Consumeris­m,’
By architect Dimitri Philippide­s, is on display at EMST. ‘Tasting Symbolic Consumeris­m,’
 ?? ?? ‘The Art of Logic: Maxwell Sublimis,’ by Panayiotis Pangalos.
‘The Art of Logic: Maxwell Sublimis,’ by Panayiotis Pangalos.

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