Beyond Antiquity
@ National Hellenic Museum
333 S Halsted St, Chicago, IL 60661
Opening Friday, May 12th, at 6PM
On view through Saturday, September 30th
Beyond Antiquity
by architect and artist John “Yanni” Fotiadis
Opening May 12
The National Hellenic Museum is proud to present Beyond Antiquity, a new exhibition from Greek American architect and artist John “Yanni” Fotiadis. This exhibition is generously Sponsored by The John S. Koudounis Family.
In a series of nearly 40 drawings, paintings and digital artworks, curated by Dr. Katherine Kelaidis. Fotiadis explores classical antiquity in Greece and takes us into the present and future via the same subjects: architecture, myth and landscape. Classical antiquity is omnipresent in Greece, where you can glance up from a cosmopolitan street in Athens and see the 2500-year-old Parthenon. The ancient past is woven into the cultural legacy of the country physically, psychologically, intellectually and emotionally. It is an immense, epic and unavoidable presence that inspires all of Fotiadis’ art.
The ancient Greek world also looms large outside of Greece: from London to Shanghai to Chicago, Greek antiquity lingers in our buildings, our books and our language. The works in Beyond Antiquity—whether depicting classical architectural forms or imagining new metaphysical environments—ask the viewer fundamental questions about our relationship to the past and the future, the everlasting and the ephemeral.
Most of the works in Beyond Antiquity were inspired by Fotiadis’ trips to Greece in 2019 and 2021, during which he searched for meaning encoded in the architecture of antiquity and its relationship to nature. As Joan Breton Connelly says in The Parthenon Enigma, “myth, landscape, and the ‘sacred’ were inseparable within the Athenian consciousness.” The art Fotiadis is presently creating attempts to capture the essence of this idea.
“It is no coincidence philosophy was born in this part of the world. The natural environment of Greece is an environment ripe for expanded thinking,” says John “Yanni” Fotiadis. “Creating these artworks has taught me that one can find the ‘divine’ in anything, even the most banal object, under the right conditions and if one looks hard enough. I find myself returning again and again to the bottomless well that is ancient Greece. Now more than ever, as we face a rapidly changing and virtually unrecognizable, technologically driven world, I find it a source of comfort, reassurance, guidance and most of all, knowledge and wisdom. To look ahead, to survive, I believe we must examine and learn from the past. I feel that is the only way we will move beyond antiquity, and beyond our present state, towards a better future.”
Fotiadis has also begun exploring 3D design software such as Rhino, which he previously used for his architectural work, to create “Metaphysical Landscapes” – a collection of digital images that show imaginary environments inhabited by Platonic solids and classical architectural forms, arranged in such a way as to capture or speak to the transcendence that is evoked when Greek architecture, deliberately placed in the landscape, begins to resonate with its surroundings. The hyper-realistic results from rendering software such as Rhino and Vray allow Fotiadis to visualize these ideas in an unprecedented way.
John “Yanni” Fotiadis is a visual artist and licensed architect in the United States. He studied architecture at Temple University and Columbia University, where he earned his Master’s degree. In his 30-year architectural career, Yanni has designed projects for clients in Doha, Seoul, Dhaka, San Francisco, Cairo, Moscow, Panama, Kyiv, Tbilisi, Athens, Dubai, and Istanbul. He says, “I’ve been fortunate that my work as an architect has given me a unique education afforded only through travel. As Socrates, my intellectual hero, said via Plutarch, ‘I am not an Athenian or a Greek, but a citizen of the world.’”
Yanni started drawing and developed a love of visual art from an early age. As an architect, he used his formidable drawing skills as a design tool, in essence as a means to an end. As a visual artist, he sees drawing as an end in itself. His artwork has explored various themes and techniques but has always been primarily inspired by the imagery of his early childhood summers in Greece. Recently, Yanni’s trips to Greece have focused on an immersion in classical antiquity. What has resulted is his ongoing drawing series started in 2019, called “The Solace of Antiquity.” The drawings, done in graphite, colored pencil and charcoal, document the ruins of ancient sites, and explore the effects of the luminous Aegean light on the architectural remnants there. Equally informed by the philosophical schools of antiquity and traditional academic drawing techniques rooted in optical theory, Yanni’s drawings reveal the unique and visceral metaphysical character of these ancient places that transcend space and time.
Yanni’s first solo art exhibit, “Metaphysical Greece,” was held at The College of Southern Nevada, Dept of Fine Arts, in the fall of 2022. He was also exhibited at The Hellenic American Project at Queens College, City University of New York in 2021. In addition to being an architect and visual artist, Yanni is an accomplished songwriter and performing musician, and he also provides design consulting services. He recently taught a series of Architectural Design studios as an adjunct professor at the Westphal College of Media Arts and Design at Drexel University in Philadelphia. He also teaches drawing classes at the Montclair Art Museum in Montclair, New Jersey.
Please visit fotiadis.net to learn more about Yanni’s creative work.
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