b. 1928, Greece
d. 2011
Vlassis Caniaris (1928-2011) remains one of the most important Greek artists of his generation. Having left Greece in the late 1950s to live and study in Rome and Paris, he lived in Berlin in the early 1970s, before returning to Athens in 1976 (two years after the fall of the Greek military dictatorship), where he remained until his death in 2011. Caniaris abandoned traditional art materials in favour of plaster, paper and wire mesh, to create works which he called ‘almost sculptures’.
Caniaris’ large-scale installations were formed by everyday objects, including newspapers, clothing (often his own and his family’s), suitcases and children’s toys, to imagine and portray the experiences of migrant workers and their families in the 1970s. His series of standing, faceless figures builds a mood which brings to mind the reception greeting people arriving in unfamiliar lands for all sorts of reasons all over the world today.