Athens Design Forum
“I developed ADF from the perspective of someone who is just encountering Greece,” explains Papanikolopoulos, who relocated from Los Angeles to Athens during the pandemic and quickly felt the urge to increase the visibility of the city’s design scene. “It’s an accessible way for people to get in touch not only with local designers but also more generally with experiences that had been held private for a very long time.”
Indeed a very private experience was a visit to Dinoisis Sotovikis’ home and workshop, located in a fascinating building of Greek modernist architect Aristomenis Provelengios from the 1950s. Designer and architect Sotovikis cleverly preserved the house in its original appearance and extended it via an unexpected connection to the neighboring building, accessible through a hidden door in his sleeping room. Throughout the house are repeating juxtapositions of past and present as well as of finished and unfinished. “For me, architecture is about time more than space, it’s about creating a connection between the past and the future,” Sotovikis explains, while his visitors are literally experiencing the passage of time through a space full of surprises.
Located in the outskirts of Athens, Vorres Museum, dedicated to contemporary Greek art and folk art showcased Part of something, an ongoing project by architectural design practice KN Group and artist-designer Stamos Michael. The site-specific environment calls upon ecologies of the local, traditional, and personal - providing an occasion to contemplate in a nature-embracing space.
At Carwan Gallery, in Athens’ port neighbourhood of Piraeus, was Volax by the greek design duo Objects of Common Interest. The name refers to a small village on the Cycladic island of Tinos, surrounded by round rocks which seem to be out of this world. Similarly, the seven functional objects made of wood and acrylic have an aura of a very elegant space opera.
An abandoned factory in the remote neighborhood of Moschato was the venue of two exhibitions. Units of Infrastructure brought together contemporary artists melding design principles in modular art forms. Among them were Zoë Paul’s, whose painted fireplace tiles breathed a new vitality when seen displaced from their functional role; Kleopatra Tsali’s hand-casted and fired melon lamps that neared the scale of totems; Elena Demetria Chantzis, who prompted viewers to question ceramic production and its place in Greek history as a tool of domestic use; Theodore Psychoyos, whose functional marble constructions stuck out with their ancient and yet contemporary appearance.
In the neighboring space, Italian designers Francesco Pace of Tellurico and Stefano Fusani of Neo standard realized their multi-day production-performance Dissonant Classicism, which deconstructed Greek stereotypes by imitating classicistic architectural forms out of styrofoam and reassembled them to stucco-coated functional sculptures.
Speaking of deconstruction: Kostas Lambridis opened up his studio in the industrial neighborhood Nea Ionia, where he creates his anarchistic and baroque-esque design-collages. Lambridis, who is represented by Carpenters Workshop Gallery, combines all kinds of materials from all over the world and all different periods of time to form them into fascinating objects that seem to contain everything at once and yet do not resemble anything else.
A highlight was the visit to the private estate of Alekos Fassianos, probably the best-known living painter in Greece, who opened his house to the public for the first time. Located in the suburban neighborhood of Papagos, Fassiano’s home and studio gives a thorough insight into the universal scope of his artistic practice: sculptural lamps, furnishings, textiles, ceramics, mosaics, and of course many of his strong and colorful paintings.
Athens Design Forum was a successful debut and according to Katerina Papanikolopoulos you can count on a very exciting Forum next year. If you plan to discover Athens' design scene yourself, take a look at Perianth, a charming boutique hotel located in the heart of the city and an excellent base for Athenian explorations of any kind.