Architectures of Mobility

29th of June, 2018

Installation resulting from a month long informal residency at the Lesvos Plant Medicine Center (Athens). As a continuation of The Wandering School Part 2: Revolution or Bust, which took the form of a journey through Greece, Architectures of Mobility is an improptu exhibition influenced by the realization that the sacred today is intimately entangled with profane enterprises as tourism, industry economic exchange and development. Inspired by the song The Nightmare of Persephone by Nikos Gatsos, the artists use the context of the sacred and travel as a lens to examine a variety of relationships.

Jean-Francois Peschot

Aggelica Gali

Jeroen Kortekaas

Jean-Francois Peschot’s (FR) work evokes notions of time and stasis, idealing spaces and non-spaces in transition. Taking place in a building in a state of re-construction, Has Been Removed analyzes in the form of an essay poem printed on drywall a moment in time spent in an elevator . In Peschot’s work the mundane takes unexpected profound insight which transform the spaces and actions of everyday life. https://jeanfrancoispeschot.com/

Aggelica Gali (GR) is a mezzo soprano. In her composition The Night she evokes tension between the archaic and modern by utilizing a nearly lost form of Greek language, Katharevousa, an old form of Greek which still used a polytonic system. The piece recites under an enchanting melody a restrained description of the physiological affect of nighttime, above waves of undulating song.

Jeroen Kortekaas’ (NL) sculptural work utilizes the visual lexicon of signage, travel and gambling to evoke the notions of flight as counterweight to pervasive feelings of confinement and stagnation. Signs and methods of display from advertising and wayfinding are host to a private mythology where the languages of travel become synonymous to our desires for transformation. They appear as traffic signs without direction, signs of endless movements and immobilities. https://jeroenkortekaas.com/