Atlas of Mediterranean Liquidity is a growing collection of interactive maps exploring water as a cultural resource at a time of climate change. The Goethe-Institut Israel, together with the Center for Digital Art Holon, launched the Atlas of Mediterranean Liquidity. Goethe-Institutes throughout the Mediterranean region, such as in Egypt, Greece, Italy, Croatia, Morocco, Tunisia, Turkey and Cyprus, have joined the project. In the Cyprus map, titled Take Us to the Water, landscapes, infrastructures, embodied experiences and nonhuman agents interlink in open-ended narratives about water and its transits, seen as both material and metaphor for exploring forms of belonging and exclusion.
Artworks: Stelios Kallinikou & Korallia Stergides
Curation: Evagoras Vanezis
Design and Development: Demetris Shammas
The Goethe-Institut represents Germany, promoting German studies abroad and fostering international cultural exchange. Established in 1961, the Goethe-Institut Zypern is one of the oldest foreign institutes globally and offers language courses for all levels. Additionally, the institute provides advanced training seminars for German teachers as a foreign language. It is also the exclusive examination center in Cyprus for nearly all Goethe- Institut exams and TestDaF. You can find the institute in the Buffer Zone, right next to the Ledra Palace Hotel.
Websites
goethe.de/cyprus
medliq.art
Evagoras Vanezis’ practice engages with the production and contextualization of cross disciplinary spaces and narratives, working between the fields of curation, art theory and creative writing.
Stelios Kallinikou presents sequences of imagery that flow into interlaced dialogues, whilst examining different themes, such as politics, colonialism, the environment, technology, spirituality, and the power of images.
Korallia Stergides explores the vital politics of care in an interdependent world, developing various characters to “remythologize” autobiographical narratives and reconstruct them as autofiction.
Demetris Shammas is a Cyprus-based architect and new media artist. Working with computational processes, he overlays the digital onto the physical to form instances of ‘algorithmic experience’.
Atlas of Mediterranean Liquidity is a growing collection of interactive maps exploring water as a cultural resource at a time of climate change. The Goethe-Institut Israel, together with the Center for Digital Art Holon, launched the Atlas of Mediterranean Liquidity. Goethe-Institutes throughout the Mediterranean region, such as in Egypt, Greece, Italy, Croatia, Morocco, Tunisia, Turkey and Cyprus, have joined the project. In the Cyprus map, titled Take Us to the Water, landscapes, infrastructures, embodied experiences and nonhuman agents interlink in open-ended narratives about water and its transits, seen as both material and metaphor for exploring forms of belonging and exclusion.
Artworks: Stelios Kallinikou & Korallia Stergides
Curation: Evagoras Vanezis
Design and Development: Demetris Shammas
The Goethe-Institut represents Germany, promoting German studies abroad and fostering international cultural exchange. Established in 1961, the Goethe-Institut Zypern is one of the oldest foreign institutes globally and offers language courses for all levels. Additionally, the institute provides advanced training seminars for German teachers as a foreign language. It is also the exclusive examination center in Cyprus for nearly all Goethe- Institut exams and TestDaF. You can find the institute in the Buffer Zone, right next to the Ledra Palace Hotel.
Websites
goethe.de/cyprus
medliq.art
Evagoras Vanezis’ practice engages with the production and contextualization of cross disciplinary spaces and narratives, working between the fields of curation, art theory and creative writing.
Stelios Kallinikou presents sequences of imagery that flow into interlaced dialogues, whilst examining different themes, such as politics, colonialism, the environment, technology, spirituality, and the power of images.
Korallia Stergides explores the vital politics of care in an interdependent world, developing various characters to “remythologize” autobiographical narratives and reconstruct them as autofiction.
Demetris Shammas is a Cyprus-based architect and new media artist. Working with computational processes, he overlays the digital onto the physical to form instances of ‘algorithmic experience’.