The Greek Pavilion at the Venice Biennale will present an installation by the artist Maria Papadimitriou that will recreate a shop for animal hides and leather from the central Greek city of Volos inside the neoclassical building.
Curated by Gabi Scardi and Alexios Papazacharias, the installation titled Why Look At Animals? AGRIMIKÁ suggests that humans’ anthropocentrism, which leads us define ourselves as “non-wild, and different from all other animals,” sparks a series of concerns ranging from politics and history to economics and traditions.
The AGRIMIKÁ are animals that coexist with humans but resist domestication. The artist explores our fascination with such animals, featured in cosmology and mythology: Rome owes its existence to a wolf; a she-goat nursed Zeus in his infancy.
“The agrimiká become the vehicle for a contemporary allegory of the dispossessed, and attempts to galvanize our instinctive resistance to the decadence that surrounds us,” the project’s statement reads.
Maria Papadimitriou is an award winning international artist based in Athens. She has previously represented Greece at the 25th Saõ Paulo Biennale.
For more on the upcoming 56th Venice Biennale see:
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