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Nicosia: Exploring Open Studios In A Closed City Crosses More Than T

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  • Nicosia: Exploring Open Studios In A Closed City Crosses More Than T

    EXPLORING OPEN STUDIOS IN A CLOSED CITY CROSSES MORE THAN THE GREEN LINE

    Cyprus Mail, Cyprus
    Nov 7 2006

    JOHN Updike once wrote "What art offers is space". Of course, he
    was talking about inner spaces, the spaces of the imagination and
    ideas, to give voice to feelings and emotions that cannot be other
    wise expressed.

    But this weekend I literally found art in different spaces. A treasure
    hunt through the old town of Nicosia on both sides of the Green Line:
    like a party game of clues and adventure. It's been a journey into
    alleyways and hidden corners, a chance to meet new people and make
    new friends: a maze to find the amazing.

    It started in Club Red on Wednesday night and since then I've been
    wandering in search of studios. Getting lost, getting wet but mostly
    getting to know this place more intimately: the interesting by-product
    of Open Studios is that it makes you walk where you would normally
    never walk. Wine offered, music playing, each studio as individual
    as the artist. It makes you make the city your own.

    My first open door was near Famagusta Gate, to the studio of Pola
    Xadjipapa-McCammon and Christos Christou. Little red arrows drew us
    down cobbled streets to find six people sitting round smoking and
    drinking in an old house like a private party.

    Shyly we entered and were immediately given a glass. I recognised
    Christos' pieces, but Pola`s were new to me and what fascinated me was
    a series she'd done on the Cyprus railway. I never even knew Cyprus
    had had a railway. The conversation flowed with the wine, like a
    private viewing all for us. But more than that, it was personal and
    relevant. We asked and she answered, not a lecture or a pretentious
    spiel, but a chance to understand the processes and the thoughts
    behind a painting.

    On Saturday night we walked down Perikleous Street, past the strip
    clubs and red light joints, a road I'd normally avoid in the dark,
    but just a few hundred metres down and the mood changed. First stop,
    Nicholas Panayi's gallery, with a video installation of baklava
    makers mirroring paper makers from China, a few steps further
    was Lia Bouyiatzi's extraordinary space. Huge, larger-than-life
    canvasses in black and white of nude women: women beautiful because
    of their voluptuous vulnerability. There was something intimate
    and inspirational about sitting over yet another glass of wine in a
    studio rather than a gallery, paintings propped against walls, among
    brushes and books. This project gives you a chance to understand the
    personality of the painter in their environment. Nowhere was this more
    apparent than on Sunday afternoon when we finally found, through a
    torrential downpour, the absolutely magical studio of Ayhatun Atesin
    near the Abrahamet Cultural Centre. We wandered at first, confused
    by the map, into a derelict house full of mangy cats and old tin
    baths, and then, sodden to the bone, saw the next house with its
    walls of embedded ceramic shards. We knocked gingerly on the door,
    and were greeted by the widest of smiles and the warmest coffee. And
    the most extraordinary and beautiful sight: tabletops brimming with
    perfectly formed ceramic shoes, like a Manolo Blahnik shop front or a
    scene from Cinderella. They would be shipped the next day to Istanbul
    for the opening of her exhibition "Silent Walk". But more than that,
    the old house was an Aladdin's cave of delights: photos, pots, plates
    covered in iridescent blues and hues of every tone. Her life's work,
    on every surface a story, no need to talk, just look.

    Opening studios within closed walls is crossing more than one divide.

    It is opening not just doors but the opportunity to connect across
    the line, physically and emotionally. Of course, there is sadness as
    you walk, things you'd rather not see but are, nevertheless, reality.

    We found ourselves wandering through the totally ruined Armenian
    Church in Arabahmet, with its graffitied walls and broken spirit,
    just paces from the artists' studios.

    But for those who really want to reclaim their city, artists can give
    hope, so get a map, take an open mind, and walk.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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