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"THRILOS 2001".


K. SARANTOPOULOS FLOUR MILLS

In Greek, thrilos means "legendary" or "heroic." Today, the epithet ep·i·thet  
n.
1.
a. A term used to characterize a person or thing, such as rosy-fingered in rosy-fingered dawn or the Great in Catherine the Great.

b.
 is often bestowed on star soccer teams and players by their fans. "Thrilos 2001," sponsored by the Olympiakos soccer ream and held in the warehouses of the K. Sarantopoulos flour mills, pairs high art with an apparently incompatible subject, the massively popular sport of soccer. Some of the artists took their cues from the game itself or from the red-and-white Olympiakos banner to create works specifically for this show; others, like Wim Delvoye Wim Delvoye (Wervik, 1965) is a Belgian conceptual artist known for a number of unconventional projects: Cloaca
Cloaca is an installation that produces feces.

The first Cloaca machine was exhibited at the MuHKA (Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp) in 2000.
, Yiannis Gaitis, Jeff Koons Jeff Koons (born January 21, 1955), is an American artist. He is noted for his use of kitsch imagery using painting, sculpture and other forms, often in large scale. Life and art
Early life and work
, and Yiannis Tsarouchis, were included because of their thematic references to sport generally. Notions of rivalry, competitiveness, and opposition were widely elaborated. For the overall installation as well, it appeared that curators Marina Fokidis and Alexandros J. Stanas employed a method one might call "competitive confrontation," in which works were so arranged that the play of opposites inherent in certain formal principles of art The principles of art are a set of rules or guidelines to keep in mind when considering the impact of a piece of artwork. They are combined with the elements of art in the production of art.  was astutely projected.

This strategy could be seen in the diagonal juxtaposition of Thanassi Totsikas's diptych Untitled, 1994, comprising two metallic red panels, with an irregularly shaped floor work, also Untitled, 2000, by Socrates Socratous, which was made of dullish red-haired plastic brushes. The contrast of tones and textures was obvious here. The content of Totsikas's work deals with painterliness and, in this instance, with the qualities and function of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
 seen in the rich depths of the industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 sheen of the wine-red surface, the work's sole link to the Olympiakos team. Socratous chose as well to resort to formal means and indirect inferences, but his work embodied an oblique counterproposal coun·ter·pro·pos·al  
n.
A proposal offered to nullify or substitute for a previous one.

Noun 1. counterproposal - a proposal offered as an alternative to an earlier proposal
 to the rectangular aluminum panels and their vertical position on the wall.

Uri Tzaig's video Infinity, 1998, uses sport and a playing field as a backdrop. Tzaig presents us with a game that is not a game, that runs ad infinitum, and in which there are no winners or losers. The poetry and elegance of movement take precedence over rivalry, negating the concept of the sports match. Projected on a wall directly above Socratous's floor piece, Tzaig's video seemed to further amplify the implicit commentary on the regularity/ irregularity A defect, failure, or mistake in a legal proceeding or lawsuit; a departure from a prescribed rule or regulation.

An irregularity is not an unlawful act, however, in certain instances, it is sufficiently serious to render a lawsuit invalid.
 of the rectangular canvas/playing field. Finally, the placement of Apostolos Georgiou's painting Untitled, 2000, on the adjacent wall created a three-way line of tension among these works, a tension further developed by the thematic content of Georgiou's painting: an undercurrent of rivalry sharply underscored by the two red figures sitting opposite each other at a table, intensely and absurdly engaged in an invisible activity.

The Olympiakos team itself was the theme of Maria Papadimitriou's video Match: Beware of the Reds, 2000. In a game of backgammon backgammon (băk`găm'ən, băk'găm`ən), game of chance and skill played by two persons upon a specially marked board divided by a space, called the bar, into two tables (inner table and outer table), each of which has 12  played between the artist and the captain of the team, Papadimitriou ingeniously exploited the notions of competitiveness and opposites. The cropped cinematic close-ups were wonderfully arresting in their restrained sensuousness, emphasized by the accent on the warm color of the skin of the hands, faces, and unclothed body parts and the controlled dominance of the bold red. The image-by-image sequence served to enunciate the idea of opposites, the dyads male/female and sensuous/rational, and the contrived meeting of art with sport. Lina Theodorou's video Living Red, 2000, focused on the obsessive and belligerent subculture that has crystallized crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize  
v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es

v.tr.
1.
 around football and the passion by which it is fired and sustained. However, it was the shots of the crowds and the players filmed in slow motion in stunningly stark artificial colors that were memorable. In contrast, Dimitris Kozaris's vide o Wrong Move, 2000, is a short, economic, and delightful spoof on the serious attitude fans bring to sport, coupled with clumsy and comical performances.
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Title Annotation:art exhibition
Author:Cafopoulos, Catherine
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Apr 1, 2001
Words:605
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