Greek painting, Greek art, Greek landscapes, marine , art, literature, poetry, fine arts, contemporary thought, contemporary Greek artists, modern Greek painters, modern Greek artists, art, Greek seascapes
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Our aim is to present the Greek landscapes in a holistic way: Greek landscapes refer to pictures and images of Greece, to paintings and art, to poetry and literature, to ancient philosophy and history, to contemporary thought and culture...
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greek artists, contemporary thought, greek painters, literature, greek paintings, modern greek artists
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greek artists, contemporary thought, greek painters, literature, greek paintings, modern greek artists
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Yannis Stavrou is a painter who touches upon the city's metaphysical tissue...
Yannis Stavrou, Acropolis 1970, oil on canvas
"...Yannis Stavrou is a painter who touches upon the city's metaphysical tissue. An offspring himself of the lucky generation, which witnessed the historical heart-rending moments of Greek urban centers, and more closely so in his city of Thessaloniki, he takes us by the hand, striding with confident strokes back to our legendary childhood evoked by his images; deep down into the bottomless hollow of Thermaikos harbour, where the massive metal shapes of ships are hovering all aloof, emerging through the midst of cracking-dawn's fog; up through the steep alleys traversing our neighborhood and past the fading reflections of its households.
The street-lamps' flickering light is cast upon windowpanes mixing with the first-born crescents of the rising sun. Our last stop finds us in the heart of the city center's morning awakening. And there, in the midst of the evocative setting of inter-war flats discerned by an artificial air of cosmopolitan facade, we spot the fine silhouette of a tram sliding through semi-darkness.
Yannis Stavrou's serene images render a lifetime's essence - an essence of matter and spirit. In his own universe, he is moulding a harmonious relationship between the "urban landscape" and infinity. In infinity's unlimited domain he dares to boldly project the nature of his feelings through the use of light. No doubt, he is aware that light expresses best a city's soul...His violet hues embellished with golden tinges render the uncompromising, "multi-ethnic" dimension of the beautiful city of Thessaloniki..."
Dr Manos G. Biris, Professor of the Architecture History in the Polytechnic School of Athens
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