Constantin Xenakis

Constantin Xenakis 1995

Constantin Xenakis (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Ξενάκης) is a European artist based in France. His work often includes written script, in particular the Hebrew alphabet.[1] symbols and codes of everyday life, traffic signs, alchemy, the zodiac, mathematical and chemical symbols, Egyptian hieroglyphics, letters from the Greek, Phoenician and Arabic alphabets.

Life

Xenakis was born in Cairo, Egypt, on 28 December 1931. He has lived in mainly in Paris since 1955. In 1976–77 he collaborated with the composer Jean-Yves Bosseur on the work Ornigrammes.[2] He was made a Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters in 1986. In 1996 he was awarded the Prix Delmas by the Institut de France, at the recommendation of the French Academy of Fine Arts. The Constantin Xenakis Room in the Fameck community centre was opened in 1991. In 1998 he was given an "Award of Appreciation" at the 24th Olympiad by the National Museum of Contemporary Art, Korea.

His work is held in the National Gallery of Greece[3] and the Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art.[4]

Works

Selected solo exhibitions

no. 1, Magazine-Catalogue in Greek, in French and in German, Redacteur en Chef, C. Xenakis, texts, Yona Friedman, Marcel Marceau, Heinz Ohff, Christos Joachimides.

See also

References

  1. Adrian M. Darmon, Autour de l'art juif: encyclopédie des peintres, photographes et sculpteurs, Carnot, 2003, p. 299. ISBN 2-84855-011-2
  2. Manfred Kelkel, Jean-Jacques Velly, Le dessous des notes: voies vers l'ésosthétique : hommage au professeur Manfred Kelkel, 29 janvier 1929-18 avril 1999, Presses Paris Sorbonne, 2001, p353. ISBN 2-84050-209-7
  3. nationalgallery.gr
  4. mmca.org.gr
  5. "Joanna Bruzdowicz", usc.edu
  6. heraleidon-art.gr

External links

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