STHENS.- EΜΣΤ | National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens is presenting its collaboration with the non-profit Schwarz Foundation, as part of its new policy of creating synergies and partnerships with other institutions in Greece and abroad, and of showcasing its collection outside the museum, beyond its metropolitan context, in other regions of Greece.
Within this framework, HANDMADE: On the Social Dimensions of Craft will be presented in the Schwarz Foundation venue Art Space Pythagorion, situated on the Greek island of Samos. The group exhibition, which runs from 5 August - 25 September 2022, features nine artists and includes works from the museum's collection.
Participating artists: Nikos Alexiou, Bertille Bak, Silvina Der Meguerditchian, Maria Louizou, Jennifer Nelson, Natalia Manta, Eleni Mylonas, Sphinxes, Maria Varela.
In recent years there has been an upsurge and renewed interest in craft-based or hand-crafted work in the contemporary art field. The term craft refers to processes, actions, techniques, and forms of creativity usually performed manually or with the use of manually operated apparatus.
With the advent of the industrial revolution, the pressure for efficiency, and low-cost mass production, craft gradually became marginalised and, in some cases, has disappeared altogether.
But many artists are returning to hand-crafted practices. One reason is perhaps the increasing pervasiveness of digital culture, the rising dominance of the immaterial in contemporary life, and the marginalisation of the tangible and the haptic.
The other may be that in many countries, craft has been primarily associated with women and the working class, as well as with non-white people marginalised groups who were excluded from the domain of high art and orthodox or dominant art historical narratives.
Today, the art-craft opposition is also being challenged because of this underlying power dynamic, which dictated what was valued and what was not. This, in many ways, explains the return of craftwork, which was once an integral part of artistic practice.
However, whilst much of the current craft-based practices are focused on the materiality, the form of the handcraft in question, or the exploration of tradition, HANDMADE: On the Social Dimensions of Craft will focus on craft-based work that has an underlying social and political dimension, and will examine the social and political economies and contexts, as well as the relational networks that lie at the core of craft-based practices and traditions.
In the work of the participating artists, the practice of hand-crafting becomes an integral part of collective empowerment, agency, the sharing of knowledge, the preservation or re-writing of history, and finally, a buffer against historical amnesia.
Craft-based contemporary artistic practices thus become an important component in reconsidering the politics of materiality, identity, labour, and social exchange, as well as embodying histories in its materials.
The Schwarz Foundation is a private non-profit institution aiming to foster the exchange of ideas and practices between cultures and countries. In view of the significant changes taking place in Europe which call for new ways of thinking, the foundations initiatives aim to assist in contributing to this process of re-evaluation and re-thinking the continent, particularly southeast Europe and its relation to its surroundings.
In this context, it initiates and supports projects which include exhibitions, residencies and curatorial fellowships, music concerts and a festival, as well as community support projects. It is the strong belief of the foundation that the understanding of history and traditions, as well as the sensitivity towards environmental issues within the Southeast Mediterranean Region, can play a vital role in designing the future of this historically important area.
This collaboration with the Schwarz Foundation coincides with the launch of a new artistic programme and a renewed mission and collection policy for ΕΜΣΤ | National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens, which also includes a commitment to fair pay for artists.