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Katy Stephanides

Katy Stephanides (Greek: Καίτη Φασουλιώτου-Στεφανίδου, 1925 – 24 March 2012) was one of the leading artists in Cypriot modernist movement in the second half of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century. She held her first solo exhibition in 1972 featuring abstract geometric paintings and continued exhibiting through 2003. She has works in the collections of the Byzantine Museum of the Archbishop Makarios III, the Loukia and Michalakis Zambelas Art Museum, the Municipal Art Gallery of Limassol and the State Gallery of Contemporary Cypriot Art.

Katy Stephanides
Καίτη Φασουλιώτου
Fasouliotis, taken in 1961
Born
Katy Fasouliotis

1925 (1925)
Limassol, Cyprus
Died2012 (aged 86–87)
NationalityCypriot
Other namesKaiti Fasouliotou-Stephanides, Kaiti Stefanidou, Katie Stephanides, Katy Fasouliotis-Stephanides, Katy Phasouliotis Stephanides
Occupationpainter

Early life

Katy Fasouliotis was born in 1925 in Limassol, Cyprus. She was the daughter of Tasoula and Panos Fasouliotis.[1][2] Her father was the editor of the Observer (Paratiritis) newspaper and she was the niece of George Fasouliotis, a cartoonist at the newspaper The Laugh (To Gelio).[1][3] From a young age, she liked to draw[4] and was encouraged to develop her talents.[1] Between 1948 and 1955, she studied at the Athens School of Fine Arts taking painting courses with Umbertos Argyros and Yiannis Moralis and studying art history with Pandelis Prevelakis.[5][6] Upon her graduation, Fasouliotis moved to London to take classes at the Saint Martin's School of Art[6] and study the art in museums and galleries in both London and Paris until 1960.[5][7]

Career

Upon completing her education, Stephanides returned to Cyprus in 1961 and began a career as a secondary school art teacher, instructing for the next twenty-five years.[5] That same year, she participated in an exhibition organized by the magazine Κυπριακά Χρονικά (Cypriot Chronicles) called "Cypriot Artists" and held in Athens. Her works in this early stage of her career reflected the early modern developments in international art in the 1950s and 1960s, showing cubist influences by such artists as Paul Cézanne, André Lhote, and Kazimir Malevich.[8] In the mid-1960s, she married the writer and painter Tasos Stephanides, with whom she had two children, Panos, who became a painter and Marina,[9] later a writer.[2] Over the next decade, she participated in numerous local and international exhibits including the 1963 Biennale of the Alexandria Museum of Fine Arts; 1970 Commonwealth Institute exhibition Contemporary Cypriot Art, which was shown in Edinburgh and London; and the 1971 São Paulo Art Biennial in Brazil.[10] In 1972, Stephanides held her first solo exhibit at the Acropolis Gallery, in Nicosia. most of the works presented were geometric abstractions which showed the influence of such painters as Naum Gabo, Piet Mondrian and Sophie Taeuber-Arp, but other pieces clearly embraced the Op art and Minimalism movements of the 1960s. She was interested in moving away from representing specific objects or nature, instead exploring essence of movement and form through space by the exploration of color, shape, and texture.[10]

In 1974, after the Cypriot coup d'état Stephanides style changed and she began introducing references to Greek history into her works as a political statement.[11] Particularly concerned about how war impacts women, her works began to explore stylized female forms and isolation, in a more expressionistic manner.[5][12][13] Using symbolism in her paintings, such as representations of Aphrodite and the mountains of Pentadaktylos, she used Greek references to both reference the detachment and separation from Cyprus' Hellenistic past and as commentary on the political events that were occurring in the period.[12][11] In 1978, Stephanides held her second solo show at Zygos Gallery in Nicosia, which presented both some of her older works and previous style, as well as a series entitled "The Depth of the World" which showed her new focus on unidentified female figures and the limits imposed upon humans by world events.[14] In her third solo exhibition, held in 1982, Stephanides' art embraces Surrealism[15] and Pop Art.[16] Throughout the 1980s, she continued to explore the idea of limits placed on women in society, using symbols like the telephone or traffic signs to communicate boundaries.[17] By the time of her 4th solo exhibition in 1988, held at Nicosia's Apocalypse Gallery, her works had moved to an exploration of color, form, and movement with an expressionistic fluidity in their composition.[18]

Stephanides work returned to pure abstraction in her 5th solo exhibit held at the Morfi Gallery in Limassol and even more so in her 6th solo showing at the Apocalypse Gallery, in which works focused on smooth vivid colors in flat space devoid of depth and volume.[19] In her 1998 exhibition at the Apocalypse Gallery, Stephanides introduced thematic elements from traditional handworks, such as tapestry and embroidery. Blurring the lines between fine art and folk art, she used motifs to represent femininity.[20] In 2003, in an exhibit Metamorphoses, hosted at the Argo Gallery in Nicosia, she expanded on these themes, bringing in references to folklore and spirituality, though in a thoroughly modern presentation strictly balancing the organization and vertical development in vivid colors on a flat surface lacking perspective of a third dimension.[21]

Death and legacy

Stephanides died on 24 March 2012.[22] She is remembered as one of the leading figures of the 20th century, who developed modern art in Cyprus.[4][6] The art historian Eleni Nikita, characterized Stephanides place as a pioneer, stating that her work "created a bridge for Cypriot art to reach the point it is at today".[1] She has works in the collections of the Byzantine Museum of the Archbishop Makarios III, the Loukia and Michalakis Zambelas Art Museum, the Municipal Art Gallery of Limassol and the State Gallery of Contemporary Cypriot Art.[5] In 2013, the Apocalypse Gallery hosted Descendance, an exhibition which featured previously unexhibited works by Stephanides, her husband, Tasos, and her son, Panos.[3]

References

Citations

Bibliography

  • Δανός, Αντώνης (2012). [Katy Stephanides (1925–2012)] (PDF). cut.ac.cy (in Greek). Limassol, Cyprus: Cyprus University of Technology. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  • Πετρίδης, Παναγιώτης, ed. (2016). "Καίτη Φασουλιώτου Στεφανίδου (1925-2012)". έργα Κυπρίων καλλιτεχνών [Works by Cypriot Artists: Katy Fasouliotis Stephanides, 1925–2012] (PDF) (in Greek). Cyprus: Υπουργείου Παιδείας και Πολιτισμού, Παιδαγωγικό Ινστιτούτο. ISBN 978-9963-0-1580-1. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 October 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  • Photiou, Maria (January 2013). (PDF) (PhD). Loughborough, England: Loughborough University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 October 2018. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  • Στεφανίδου, Μαρίνα (4 April 2018). [For Katy Fasouliotis-Stephanides]. Phileleftheros (in Greek). Nicosia, Cyprus. Archived from the original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  • "Aπεβίωσε η ζωγράφος Καίτη Στεφανίδου" [Death of painter Katy Stephanides]. Παράθυρο (in Greek). Limassol, Cyprus. March 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  • "Descendance Exhibition—Tasos, Katy and Panos Stephanides". Cyprus To-day. Nicosia, Cyprus: Public Information Office, Ministry of the Interior. LI (1): 46–49. March 2013. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  • . Kathimerini (in Greek). Athens, Greece. 27 March 2012. Archived from the original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2018. Exited: The painter Kati Stefanides
  • "Καίτη Φασουλιώτου Στεφανίδου, 1925–2012" [Katy Fasouliotis Stephanides, 1925–2012]. Παράθυρο (in Greek). Limassol, Cyprus. April 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  • [The method of three: Tasos, Katie and Panos Stephanides at the Apocalypse Gallery]. Πολίτης News (in Greek). Nicosia, Cyprus. 1 February 2013. Archived from the original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2018.

Further reading

  • Στεφανίδου, Μαρίνα (2009). Καίτη Φασουλιώτου Στεφανίδου—Katy Phasouliotis Stephanides (in Greek). Nicosia, Cyprus: Εν Τύποις. ISBN 978-9963-654-95-6.

katy, stephanides, greek, Καίτη, Φασουλιώτου, Στεφανίδου, 1925, march, 2012, leading, artists, cypriot, modernist, movement, second, half, 20th, century, first, decade, 21st, century, held, first, solo, exhibition, 1972, featuring, abstract, geometric, paintin. Katy Stephanides Greek Kaith Fasoyliwtoy Stefanidoy 1925 24 March 2012 was one of the leading artists in Cypriot modernist movement in the second half of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century She held her first solo exhibition in 1972 featuring abstract geometric paintings and continued exhibiting through 2003 She has works in the collections of the Byzantine Museum of the Archbishop Makarios III the Loukia and Michalakis Zambelas Art Museum the Municipal Art Gallery of Limassol and the State Gallery of Contemporary Cypriot Art Katy StephanidesKaith FasoyliwtoyFasouliotis taken in 1961BornKaty Fasouliotis1925 1925 Limassol CyprusDied2012 aged 86 87 NationalityCypriotOther namesKaiti Fasouliotou Stephanides Kaiti Stefanidou Katie Stephanides Katy Fasouliotis Stephanides Katy Phasouliotis StephanidesOccupationpainter Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Death and legacy 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Bibliography 5 Further readingEarly life EditKaty Fasouliotis was born in 1925 in Limassol Cyprus She was the daughter of Tasoula and Panos Fasouliotis 1 2 Her father was the editor of the Observer Paratiritis newspaper and she was the niece of George Fasouliotis a cartoonist at the newspaper The Laugh To Gelio 1 3 From a young age she liked to draw 4 and was encouraged to develop her talents 1 Between 1948 and 1955 she studied at the Athens School of Fine Arts taking painting courses with Umbertos Argyros and Yiannis Moralis and studying art history with Pandelis Prevelakis 5 6 Upon her graduation Fasouliotis moved to London to take classes at the Saint Martin s School of Art 6 and study the art in museums and galleries in both London and Paris until 1960 5 7 Career EditUpon completing her education Stephanides returned to Cyprus in 1961 and began a career as a secondary school art teacher instructing for the next twenty five years 5 That same year she participated in an exhibition organized by the magazine Kypriaka Xronika Cypriot Chronicles called Cypriot Artists and held in Athens Her works in this early stage of her career reflected the early modern developments in international art in the 1950s and 1960s showing cubist influences by such artists as Paul Cezanne Andre Lhote and Kazimir Malevich 8 In the mid 1960s she married the writer and painter Tasos Stephanides with whom she had two children Panos who became a painter and Marina 9 later a writer 2 Over the next decade she participated in numerous local and international exhibits including the 1963 Biennale of the Alexandria Museum of Fine Arts 1970 Commonwealth Institute exhibition Contemporary Cypriot Art which was shown in Edinburgh and London and the 1971 Sao Paulo Art Biennial in Brazil 10 In 1972 Stephanides held her first solo exhibit at the Acropolis Gallery in Nicosia most of the works presented were geometric abstractions which showed the influence of such painters as Naum Gabo Piet Mondrian and Sophie Taeuber Arp but other pieces clearly embraced the Op art and Minimalism movements of the 1960s She was interested in moving away from representing specific objects or nature instead exploring essence of movement and form through space by the exploration of color shape and texture 10 In 1974 after the Cypriot coup d etat Stephanides style changed and she began introducing references to Greek history into her works as a political statement 11 Particularly concerned about how war impacts women her works began to explore stylized female forms and isolation in a more expressionistic manner 5 12 13 Using symbolism in her paintings such as representations of Aphrodite and the mountains of Pentadaktylos she used Greek references to both reference the detachment and separation from Cyprus Hellenistic past and as commentary on the political events that were occurring in the period 12 11 In 1978 Stephanides held her second solo show at Zygos Gallery in Nicosia which presented both some of her older works and previous style as well as a series entitled The Depth of the World which showed her new focus on unidentified female figures and the limits imposed upon humans by world events 14 In her third solo exhibition held in 1982 Stephanides art embraces Surrealism 15 and Pop Art 16 Throughout the 1980s she continued to explore the idea of limits placed on women in society using symbols like the telephone or traffic signs to communicate boundaries 17 By the time of her 4th solo exhibition in 1988 held at Nicosia s Apocalypse Gallery her works had moved to an exploration of color form and movement with an expressionistic fluidity in their composition 18 Stephanides work returned to pure abstraction in her 5th solo exhibit held at the Morfi Gallery in Limassol and even more so in her 6th solo showing at the Apocalypse Gallery in which works focused on smooth vivid colors in flat space devoid of depth and volume 19 In her 1998 exhibition at the Apocalypse Gallery Stephanides introduced thematic elements from traditional handworks such as tapestry and embroidery Blurring the lines between fine art and folk art she used motifs to represent femininity 20 In 2003 in an exhibit Metamorphoses hosted at the Argo Gallery in Nicosia she expanded on these themes bringing in references to folklore and spirituality though in a thoroughly modern presentation strictly balancing the organization and vertical development in vivid colors on a flat surface lacking perspective of a third dimension 21 Death and legacy EditStephanides died on 24 March 2012 22 She is remembered as one of the leading figures of the 20th century who developed modern art in Cyprus 4 6 The art historian Eleni Nikita characterized Stephanides place as a pioneer stating that her work created a bridge for Cypriot art to reach the point it is at today 1 She has works in the collections of the Byzantine Museum of the Archbishop Makarios III the Loukia and Michalakis Zambelas Art Museum the Municipal Art Gallery of Limassol and the State Gallery of Contemporary Cypriot Art 5 In 2013 the Apocalypse Gallery hosted Descendance an exhibition which featured previously unexhibited works by Stephanides her husband Tasos and her son Panos 3 References EditCitations Edit a b c d Cyprus To day 2013 p 47 a b Stefanidoy 2018 a b Poliths News 2013 a b Para8yro 2014 a b c d e Petridhs 2016 p 38 a b c Kathimerini 2012 Cyprus To day 2013 p 48 Danos 2012 p 2 Para8yro 2012 a b Danos 2012 p 3 a b Photiou 2013 p 198 a b Danos 2012 pp 4 5 Photiou 2013 p 199 Danos 2012 pp 5 6 Danos 2012 p 6 Danos 2012 p 7 Photiou 2013 pp 199 200 Danos 2012 p 8 Danos 2012 p 9 Danos 2012 p 10 Danos 2012 p 11 Para8yro 2012 Bibliography Edit Danos Antwnhs 2012 Kaith Stefanidoy 1925 2012 Katy Stephanides 1925 2012 PDF cut ac cy in Greek Limassol Cyprus Cyprus University of Technology Archived from the original PDF on 6 October 2018 Retrieved 6 October 2018 Petridhs Panagiwths ed 2016 Kaith Fasoyliwtoy Stefanidoy 1925 2012 erga Kypriwn kallitexnwn Works by Cypriot Artists Katy Fasouliotis Stephanides 1925 2012 PDF in Greek Cyprus Ypoyrgeioy Paideias kai Politismoy Paidagwgiko Institoyto ISBN 978 9963 0 1580 1 Archived PDF from the original on 2 October 2018 Retrieved 6 October 2018 Photiou Maria January 2013 Rethinking the history of Cypriot art Greek Cypriot women artists in Cyprus PDF PhD Loughborough England Loughborough University Archived from the original PDF on 7 October 2018 Retrieved 7 October 2018 Stefanidoy Marina 4 April 2018 Gia thn Kaith Fasoyliwtoy Stefanidoy For Katy Fasouliotis Stephanides Phileleftheros in Greek Nicosia Cyprus Archived from the original on 6 October 2018 Retrieved 6 October 2018 Apebiwse h zwgrafos Kaith Stefanidoy Death of painter Katy Stephanides Para8yro in Greek Limassol Cyprus March 2012 Retrieved 6 October 2018 Descendance Exhibition Tasos Katy and Panos Stephanides Cyprus To day Nicosia Cyprus Public Information Office Ministry of the Interior LI 1 46 49 March 2013 Retrieved 6 October 2018 Efyge h zwgrafos Kaith Stefanidoy Kathimerini in Greek Athens Greece 27 March 2012 Archived from the original on 6 October 2018 Retrieved 6 October 2018 Exited The painter Kati Stefanides Kaith Fasoyliwtoy Stefanidoy 1925 2012 Katy Fasouliotis Stephanides 1925 2012 Para8yro in Greek Limassol Cyprus April 2014 Retrieved 6 October 2018 H me8odos twn triwn Tasos Kaith kai Panos Stefanidhs sthn gkaleri Apokalypsh The method of three Tasos Katie and Panos Stephanides at the Apocalypse Gallery Poliths News in Greek Nicosia Cyprus 1 February 2013 Archived from the original on 6 October 2018 Retrieved 6 October 2018 Further reading EditStefanidoy Marina 2009 Kaith Fasoyliwtoy Stefanidoy Katy Phasouliotis Stephanides in Greek Nicosia Cyprus En Typois ISBN 978 9963 654 95 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Katy Stephanides amp oldid 1096366384, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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