From 17 December 2023 to 11 February 2024, 2023 Eleusis European Capital of Culture inaugurates a new era for the renovated IRIS factory with Mystery 111 Eleusis Terracotta Army by international artist Juan Esteban Sandoval. An exhibition as a tribute to the people who work in Elefsina and the broader West Attica region, a huge collective portrait that was made to represent the people who have forged with their work, their physical toil and their lives the current image of the place where they live. The exhibition will open on Sunday 17 December, during the closing ceremony of 2023 Eleusis, Mystery 1 Closing : Opening | A ceremony.
Artist: Juan Esteban Sandoval
Curator: Zoi Moutsokou – Direction of Contemporary Art 2023 Eleusis
Sound artist: Giorgos Moraitis
Photographer: Sylvia Diamantopoulou
Production management: Central Projects ΑΜΚΕ
Workshops management: Sektor30
Production management in Italy: Faenza Art Ceramic Center
Helmet production: Manifatture Sottosasso
Assistant to helmet production: Jean Canevaro
Director of the mini documentary: Giorgos Kyvernitis
Assistant to project co-ordination & mini documentary: Anastasia Tsopelaki
Production management for the mini documentary: Central Projects ΑΜΚΕ – Long Run Productions
Organised by 2023 Eleusis European Capital of Culture
Mystery 111 Eleusis Terracotta Army is implemented in the framework of the National Recovery and Resilience Plan Greece 2.0 with funding from the European Union – NextGenerationEU.
Information:
Dates: 17 December 2023 to 11 February 2024
Opening hours:
Wednesday to Friday, 17.00 – 20.00
Saturday & Sunday, 13.00 – 20.00
Closed: 24/12 & 31/12
Opening: Sunday 17 December, 13.00 [during the closing ceremony of 2023 Eleusis, Mystery 1 Closing : Opening | A ceremony]
During the last weeks of the exhibition, specifically from Sunday, January 21, and every Wednesday and Sunday, Juan Sandoval will be at IRIS factory to distribute the clay helmets he created for participants and inhabitants of Eleusis! This way, the project will not only continue to exist but will also remain alive in the city for which it was created.
Dates: Wednesday, January 24 & 31, February 7 | 17:00 – 20:00 Sunday, January 21 & 28, February 4 & 11 | 13:00 – 20:00
More than 2,000 helmets for an exhibition – tribute to the people who work in Elefsina and the broader West Attica region. The project consists of 2,000 handmade clay helmets that refer to the local workforce and the concept of labour through the eyes of the inhabitants of the Thriasian Plain. Sandoval visited local factories where he had the opportunity to talk with workers, while after an open call to the local community more than 1,000 active or retired workers participated in the project by filling in a questionnaire with their personal information, names of family members, hobbies, preferences. These data together with words related to the concept of labour collected among the inhabitants of Elefsina formed the basis for the artist to decorate the helmets using carving and painting techniques. All the helmets are exhibited in a large-scale installation accompanied by a soundscape created exclusively for the project by the international sound artist Giorgos Moraitis to make up a unique experiential experience for the visitor, with multiple references to the industrial environment of the area.
Working around the world with communities and associations, Juan Sandoval develops participatory projects that engage in a dialogue with the social context in which they are created. In recent years, his research has focused on the idea of manual labour and the role of the worker in processes of economic, political and social transformation. With Mystery 111 Eleusis Terracotta Army, the artist presents the results of the toil of thousands of people who transformed, within a few decades, an agricultural land into one of the country’s largest industrial centres, the multiple effects of this transformation and the constant transitions, the rapid changes that are still taking place today.
The helmet is chosen as the central feature of the project, since it is an object that is used daily to protect workers in all sectors of industrial activity; also, the material from which the helmets are made − clay − alludes to the everyday and ritualistic objects that have been found in the archaeological site of Elefsina. Thus, it functions as a symbol linking the city’s contemporary industrial past and present with its ancient history.
At the end of the exhibition, the clay helmets will be distributed to the participants, in this way, the artwork will remain in the city together with the people with whom it was created.
At the same time, a series of ceramics workshops will be held for local residents, while the clay objects created by the participants will be fired in an ephemeral kiln that will be located at the IRIS factory on the opening day. More information will be announced soon.
Mystery 111 Eleusis Terracotta Army is a project that manages to activate the local community of the area, the city and the broader West Attica region, a project that raises questions about the nature, evolution and future of work and, at the same time, about the value of culture today in an industrial city; a project that provokes and challenges.
Mystery 111 Eleusis Terracotta Armyis implemented in the framework of the National Recovery and Resilience Plan Greece 2.0 with funding from the European Union – NextGenerationEU.
Further Info
Labor
The thematic axis of the artistic programme titled Labor explores the past and the present of work, the common European challenges of precariousness and the model of a contemporary sustainable economy, focusing on the pioneering linking of art with fields such as industry, science, technology and social innovation. Thus, it addresses another important feature of European cultural heritage, industry, which has been the basis of Europe’s development in the last few centuries. The thematic axis creates synergies between artists and businesses in various sectors as well as between artists and scientists, through three themes/notions: “The Future Starts Here”, “Culture My Profession/Culture My Hobby”, “Capacity Building and Applied Innovation Centre”.