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Dimitris Yeros - Δημήτρης Γέρος

Bold and the Beautiful - Holden Luntz Gallery

Bold and the Beautiful

Holden Luntz Gallery

29 December 2011 - 3 February 2012

 

Zoom magazine

Click here to see some samples from the magazine.

 

Return To Arcadia

Return to Arcadia

Holden Luntz Gallery

256 Worth Avenue. Palm Beach, Florida 33480

January 29th – February 25th, 2011

return_to_arcadia

 

Shades Of Love at Cacoyannis Foundation

Dimitris Yeros
Shades of Love

duane

Photographs and Videos
On C. P. Cavafy’s Poems

 

1 – 31 December 2010

MICHAEL CACOYANNIS FOUNDATION

Piraeus 206, Tavros, Athens 11778, tel: 210-3418550

Open Daily 18:00 – 22:00

 

Shades Of Love

Unique to Yeros’s vision is that his creative process is often like a poet’s. Certainly no contemporary photographer is more “poetic”.

John Wood, from the Introduction


An arresting fusion of poetry and visual art, Shades of Love takes its inspiration from one of Greece’s greatest writers: Constantine P. Cavafy.  Dimitris Yeros has produced nearly seventy photographic illustrations which bring out every nuance of Cavafy’s writing-with romance, intrigue, humor, despair and eroticism each playing a part.


Yeros has long admired Cavafy’s poems, calling him “the greatest Greek poet since antiquity”. The photographs in Shades of Love were taken over several years in which Yeros worked with models from a group of, as he puts it, “friends and acquaintances whose life or work was somehow connected with Cavafy”. Among Yeros’s models are prominent members of the artistic community such as Jeff Koons, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Gore Vidal, Tom Wesselmann and Clive Barker – these notable names springing from the idea to use “people from the world of letters and the arts…who knew and admired Cavafy’s poetry”. They are joined by a coterie of beautiful faces who represent the virility of youth – so often a theme in Cavafy’s work.

In addition to its visual richness, the book presents new English poetic translation of Cavafy by David Connolly. This complex collaboration assures  that Shades of Love explores the lines between light and dark, youth and age, seen and unseen – illuminating thems that this poet and photographer share.


Yeros says he is not sure what Cavafy would make of the photographs were he alive today, but Edward Albee (whose portrait also appears in the book) writes in his Foreword that he is “certain they would have pleased [him] greatly”.

 

Hellen Keller Or Arakawa

 

 

Fryssiras Museum

 

Blue Magazine

 

21st

 

 

Gabriel Garcia Marquez

 

Cow Parade, Athens 2006

 

Vernisage

 

Erotica, Moscow

 

Municipal Art Gallery Hania-Greece

Municipal Art Gallery, Hania-Greece

The exhibition “Beyond the real” examines the influence that the surrealist movement exercised on the Greek art scene. The show’s starting point is a work by Nikos Engonopoulos (1907-1985) entitled “The railway station”. Executed in 1936, it is among his first surrealist experiments and was included at the Venice Biennale, in 1954, which was devoted to surrealism.

Engonopoulos, a painter and poet, enriched his surrealist paintings with clear references to the culture and history of Greece. Abolishing logic, he drew images from the subconscious creating absurd narrative stories that combine antiquity with the Byzantium, the period of the Greek Revolution, and his own epoch.

Antoine Mayo (1905-1990), a Greek painter of the diaspora born in Egypt, was in Paris in the 1920s when surrealism flourished. There, he encountered many surrealist artists and poets, but never joined the original group. In 1929, he exhibited at the Parisian “Galerie des Quatre Chemins” with Giorgio de Chirico, founder of Italy’s “Metaphysical School of Painting”, a source of inspiration for many surrealists. Mayo was unknown in Greece prior to 1983, when he showed his paintings in Athens for the first time. Engonopoulos was left alone to face the suspicions that many Greeks felt towards André Breton’s automatic surrealist method and the bizarre images that resulted from this random process.

In the late sixties and early seventies, a new generation of Greek artists emerged, aiming at capturing in painting a world beyond the real; possibly as a reaction to the military dictatorship that governed Greece from 1967 to 1974. 

Alkis Ghinis, George Derpapas, Alexandros Issaris, Sarantis Karavousis, Thodoros Pantaleon, and Dimitris Yeros do not form a collective surrealist group. Rather, they are independent artists whose paintings deliberately recreate a dream-like atmosphere, reminiscent of surrealist art. Allusions to Greece consistently appear, adding a personal note to their oeuvre.

“Beyond the real”

29 May- 21 August 2009


Exhibition Hours: Monday-Saturday 10:00-14:00, Monday-Friday 19:00-22:00.  Sunday closed.



Tickets: 2€
Concessions: 1€


 

Callicoon Fine Arts

Photi Giovanis, Lee Hartwell and Stephen Motika Invite you to join us and celebrate the opening of our creative collaboration

Callicoon Fine Arts & Custom Framing


with Nightboat Books

Saturday, May 16th 5:30 to 7:30pm




“All Suffering Soon to End!”

an inaugural group exhibition with artworks by:


Susan Bee, Paul Brainard, Glen Fogel, Elise Freda, Alicia Gibson, Daniel Gordon, Anitra Haendel, Andrew Hershey, Arnold Kemp, Caroline Koebel, Elissa Levy, Jeff Marlin, Paul McMahon, Forrest Myers, Hunter Reynolds, David Scher, Carolee Schneemann, Joshua Thorson and Dimitris Yeros.



27 Lower Main Street, Upstairs
Callicoon, NY

Wine generously provided by the Callicoon Wine Merchant

 

New York Times

 

 

 

The Nude Male

 

Art World

 

Museum Bochum, 1986

 

 

 

WERKSTATT GALLERY, BERLIN

WERKSTATTGALLERIE

 
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