The Phototropic Cubism of Chatzikyriakos-Ghikas

A story rooted in Paris

Nikos Chatzikyriakos-Ghikas went to Paris at a very early age, at the beginning of the Twenties. European Modernism had already completed its various revolutions through a series of movements that developed in different directions. This was a period of syncretism and tolerance. The post-World War I optimism, the intellectual tolerance, the exuberant artistic ambience of Paris, defined the climate which had a formative influence on the young Ghika.

Athens Houses (1927/1928) by Hatzikyriakos-Ghika NikosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

His master Konstantinos Parthenis (1878/1879 – 1967), had prepared him through his methodical teaching based on geometrical principles to comprehend Cubism and geometric abstraction without much effort. 

Portrait of a Girl (ca.1935-1940) by Hatzikyriakos-Ghika NikosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

Furthermore, this contemplative and educated painter would soon discover the same principles in Byzantine art as well.

Essence and Shadow (1938) by Hatzikyriakos-Ghika NikosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

In Paris which was the foremost artistic center of the time, he said: “I was spontaneously drawn to the most austere form of art, Cubism, or rather its second period, synthetic Cubism”.

Party by the Sea (1931) by Hatzikyriakos-Ghika NikosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

While Αnalytical Cubism sought the reduction of the visible to conceptual shapes, Synthetic Cubism returned to their sources, to the senses, to a new acquaintance with the things themselves, which finally led to Collage. 

Chatzikyriakos-Ghikas was initiated on his own behalf in both these variants, but from nature, with light, colour and language all Greek. 

Fruit Store "Apollo" (1939) by Hatzikyriakos-Ghika NikosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

Apollon Grocery Store helps us understand Ghika's post-cubist idiom. 

Carefully reading the painting, one realises that it depicts recognizable objects: a store, its name indicated by a sign. 

Underneath a white awning are seen the facade and the door. 

Fruit boxes are arrayed in front; there are various vegetables and plants. So, what is new about this painting? 

Well, that the artist fragments, refracts the surface — as if we were looking at a grocery store through the pieces of a broken mirror — and depicts a different subject in each piece, in a simple, decorative fashion.  The painting thus becomes rather like a puzzle. 

Chatzikyriakos-Ghikas loves vivid colors and multiform shapes, and, accordingly, his paintings convey an effect of elan vital and optimism.

The Studio (1960) by Hatzikyriakos-Ghika NikosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

Made in a post-cubist style, this fascinating painting introduces us to the artist`s world, his studio. Looking closely at this densely structured puzzle, one gradually makes out several pieces of furniture and other objects that seem lost in a kaleidoscope of colours.

Parisian Roofs (1952) by Hatzikyriakos-Ghika NikosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

A figure of the renowned Thirties Generation in Greece, Ghika developed cubist and constructivist formulations in his painting, achieving a purely personal amalgam of the European avant-garde and indigenous traditional elements. 

Credits: Story

Texts: Marina Lampraki-Plaka, Professor Emeritus of the History of Art, ex-Director, National Gallery - Alexandros Soutsos Museum, Athens 
Project leader: Efi Agathonikou, Head of Collections Department,  National Gallery - Alexandros Soutsos Museum, Athens
Images: Stavros Psiroukis & Thalia Kimpari, Photographic Studio,  National Gallery - Alexandros Soutsos Museum, Athens
Digital curation: Dr. Alexandros Teneketzis, Art Historian & Marina Tomazani, Art Historian, Curator, National Gallery - Alexandros  Soutsos Museum  

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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