Fabrica Hill

Published 12th of November, 2017

Hate To See The Spider...

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So what is the point of all the threads?

Honeycombed Walls

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To find out, we need to find the main entrance.

The Main Entrance

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There is a sign here which reads:


TERRA MEDITERRANEA IN ACTION

An exhibition of contemporary art, a conference and a series of parallel actions

Pafos 2017, European Capital of Culture presents in Nicosia and in Pafos Terra Mediterranea: In Action, a project that includes a major contemporary art exhibition, an international conference and a series of parallel actions with the participation of a great number of artists from Cyprus and abroad. The project is organised by the Pierides Foundation and the Nicosia Municipal Arts Centre (NiMAC) and is curated by Dr Yiannis Toumazis.

Terra Mediterranea: In Action aims at detecting, investigating and presenting the reflections of contemporary artists on today's universal landscape of economic. political. religious, social, but also deeply existential crisis of identity, especially as viewed through "Mediterranean" eyes, from both a political and a poetic stance.

More Threads

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The sign continues:


CHIHARU SHIOTA

Born 1972 in Osaka (JP), lives and works in Berlin (DE)

A Walk through the line

Chiharu Shiota is using red string, which symbolises the connection between human beings througout a timeline or individual history. Each person has their own timeline, their own vision of past, present and future and these lines intertwine creating an intimate reality within space and time.

Everyone wants to connect and have this part of land so bad that it creates the opposite effect, by disconnecting and cutting relaionships and bringing up conflict.

A red line symbolises human relationships, which can be cut, tangled or knotted. Individual memory gathered creates a complex netwroks just as the neural system of the human brain works. Through his installation the artist proposes a walk through these lines.

Another Exit

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So now you know!

Personally, I just think it looks pretty. But I was never one for art appreciation.

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