‘Things as They Are’

This exhibition at Jenny up the Hill on Syros spotlights the ambivalent nature of objects. Five artists draw attention to objects in their physical evidence, as they are. But surface and appearance are only the beginning. Looking at the works prompts us to question whether there is such a thing as a true nature of objects or materials.

In an era of high digital-image consumption, the artists in this exhibition invite us to regain interest in the physical qualities of the world that surrounds us. Touch and tactility are essential in connecting us with the environment and contributing to our understanding of life.

The motifs in the works of Lia Kazakou (Greece, 1980) at first seem clear and identifiable – fragments of clothing, the front view of a dress, a single sleeve, the folds around two buttons. Yet the way the artist portrays the items imbues them with ambiguity. The framing is very specific, with a “harsh” cut that highlights the abstraction of the work, the way the lines develop, or the shadows that are cast. Kazakou is based in Thessaloniki and regularly shows her work in exhibitions in Greece and Germany.

One of the paintings by Jenny Eden (United Kingdom, 1978) is called Hunebed – after the Dutch word for dolmen – as a way of suggesting a tomb-like chamber. The central area shows a ruptured space that could represent animal or human innards, a dissection opening out and tunneling backwards. Yet other ways of reading the figuration are also possible, an important quality of the painting. It never comes to rest, instead presenting a shape in motion, and it is full of contradictions in terms of psychology, being gentle and raw at once. Eden is a lecturer at the Manchester School of Art, and she is co-director of Oceans Apart, a gallery in Salford dedicated to contemporary painting.

For José Heerkens (The Netherlands, 1950), the horizontal has always been important in the composition of a painting, not just for orientation and balance, but also to evoke a sense of freedom and to create space to breathe. She is not so much interested in the illusion of depth (as through a horizon in a landscape), but rather in opening up the work to make it wide and generous. In her practice, the artist looks at how colors in different gradations or combinations work together on the surface. Heerkens works both on life-size canvases and on small-size panels like those in this exhibition. She aims to present color as purely as possible, without leading viewers to think about specific objects,figures, or landscapes. Colour: Free and Connected, an important retrospective of her work, was shown in the Kröller Müller Museum in The Netherlands in 2023.

As a painter, Paula Zarina-Zemane (Latvia, 1988) has an interest in landscape and the human figure, but at the same time, she values painting in a more abstract sense, as a play of forms and colors. The movement involved in the process of making a painting, with the speed it suggests and the depth or flatness it evokes, is part of what she wants to show. Both deliberate actions and accidents play a role. In recent years, Zarina has expanded her practice from canvas and wood panels to ceramics, further developing the oval forms we know from her paintings. Based in Riga, Zarina-Zemane has shown her works across Europe.

After graduating from the Academy of Fine Arts in Bologna, Davide Girardi decided to work some years for himself. He developed a body of work, mostly small and intimate in scale, from which two pieces are now presented for the first time in an exhibition. In Girardi’s approach collage and painting go hand in hand. He has been drawn to this method because it allows to create a tension between the destruction of an image and its reconstruction. In this process layering and depths are of high importance. The space created in his works can be read in different ways. Images like an interior or landscape are at the basis and create a sense of familiarity, yet their execution brings in an element of the unfamiliar or present a balance that is in the process of being challenged.

Things as They Are, curated by Jurriaan Benschop unfolds in two parts at Jenny up the Hill on Syros, Greece. Part 1 is on view from 18 July through 15 September, part 2 rom 18 September till 10 November, 2025.

Book launch & exhibition in Athens

opening and book launch Why Paintings Work in Athens

On July 12 the book Why Paintings Work was presented at Kourd Gallery in Athens. The gallery shows currently work of 8 artists who are featured in the book. There are different threads running through the show, connecting some of the works, and putting them into a dialogue. For instance Michael Markwick and David Benforado share an interest in nature and materiality, yet without presenting straightforward images of nature. Paula Zarina-Zemane and Maria Capelo both stay close to the moment of conception, when some kind of recognizable forms starts to appear on the surface of the work. In their processes a compositional idea is present, yet there is as much attention for accident and the intuition of the painter’s hand at work. Walking through the exhibition, further connections can be discovered. The participating artists are Nikos Aslanidis, David Benforado, Maria Capelo, Béatrice Dreux, Andreas Ragnar Kassapis, Michael Markwick, Paula Zarina-Zemane, Gerlind Zeilner. In the book around 30 additional artists are featured.

Until 6 August Kourd gallery is open during weekdays (Mon-Friday, 12-8 pm) at Kassianis 4 in Athens. From 7 August it will be closed for holidays. Late August and early September the show can be visited by appointment. Further announcements will be made.

Exhibition ‘Three of a Kind’

The exhibition ‘Three of a Kind’ presents the work of three painters who share an interest in ambivalent forms of figuration: Milla Aska, Veronika Hilger, and Paula Zarina-Zemane. Their paintings depict situations or figures that cannot be identified in one, singular way but remain open to different readings. Yet in the choice of colors and the treatment of surface and paint, each of the artists develops a specific voice and unique character.

The figures in the work of Milla Aska (1993, based in Helsinki) appear to be behind a veil. They do not seem to be fully developed, but rather in the process of becoming visible and tangible. This impression is evoked through Aska’s approach to building up a painting with thin, translucent layers of paint. “My paintings seek shape around themes such as materiality and bodily sensations – for instance, how something feels against the skin, or what warmth feels like. I am intrigued by forms that seem to be something specific but don’t quite reveal themselves.”

The paintings of Veronika Hilger (1981, based in Munich) combine elements of landscape, still life, and portrait. Hilger is a specialist in ambiguous figuration. The shapes in her paintings have a familiar, often organic touch but are not specific enough to name. The artist presents them on an elementary level, stripped of details. As a result, the forms have a dynamic appearance: a foot could be a leaf, a leaf could be an animal, an animal could be a stone. “The organic is something that you can easily dock onto as a human, and that creates a kind of identification potential,” the artist noted.

In the works of Paula Zarina-Zemane (1988, based in Riga), the distinction between human and environment is blurred. The works oscillate between abstract compositions formed through clouds of color, and more concrete outlines of landscapes. The paintings are usually the result of a fast process, and they do evoke a sense of speed through the traces left by the brush. Yet the reduced composition also sets a reflective mood. “I am trying to get the result in one go,” the artist noted.

Three of a Kind opened on 30 June 2022 at KOGO Gallery in Tartu, Estonia and runs till 3 September 2022. The exhibition is curated by Jurriaan Benschop. It is part of the exhibition series Past is the Present at the Kogo Gallery in 2022.