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Marilena Zamboura 1985-2002
by Aphrodite Kouria
From the beginning of the 80's, Marilena Zamboura in the course of her career as a painter has been narrating stories of a personal mythology, seeking to define her identity and her artistic persona. Having as a starting point the individuality, the privacy, the personal experience, Zamboura paints her obsessions, moving like an acrobat between reality, fantasy and illusion, between the present and the past, in a dual route in time using memory and its mythmaking functions. In a series of her early paintings, the artist stages her scenes around the closed and introverted microcosm of the children's everyday life. In these paintings, her old toys are the leading figures, inside specific, existing, fully defined places, directly related to situations of her childhood, which she "appropriates" through painting. The naivety and the knowledge, the world of the children and the world of the adults are interwoven in their intersected tracks, signalling and impressing upon each other. Her paintings become seeking places of a lost paradise, places of utopia, places inhabited by desires and ideas, haunted by fears, that ask for their spell. Realistic, immediately recognizable beings and objects co-exist and converse with reflections of imagination, symbols and unrealistic creatures. The entirety and integrity co-exist dialectically with the fragmented reality and a lost (maybe for ever) unity.
So far, the autobiographical dimension has been the keystone of Zamboura's work. The scope and the context, however, become gradually different. The artist will expand her horizon; she will search for her self - knowledge using other means. She will be concerned with the issue of the gender identity, and specifically of the female identity, in different versions, either seen in the light of the personal-individual environment and of the age circle or inscribed in historical and social contexts and in codified attitudes (for example, in her paintings from the series "One- two, one-two, masculine- feminine" in the "Kyra-Frosyni" cycle, in "Narration of an age" 1993-94,1995,1999). Based on the legend of the punishment, on Kyra Frosyni's and other women's drowning by Ali Pasha in the lake in Ioannina, Zamboura proceeds to a speculation of the female nature. A speculation placed in the historical- ethnographic framework, with the environmentscenery of the drama, that is, the lake, Ali Pasha's seraglio, the Castle with its narrow streets, as a significant background Avoiding the folklore and picturesqueness, she describes her relationship with the legend by visual means, by the various materials used as well as by artifices. On a second level, she reproduces the legend's power and the charm that exerts on us, with the contribution of time and its process. Her speculation about the gender identity is engrafted with the primary issues of the myth, with its inner elements and its symbolisms, with references to primitive, catalytic forces and notions: death-life, love, violence, power, destiny, nature, water. The emblematic depiction, the fragmentation, the repetition of partial motifs (for example that of the palm), with various references will constitute the main components of the artist's narrative code. The charge of the meaning is enhanced not only by a gesturing script of an expressionistic character and of intense painterly quality, but also by the language itself and the significance of the materials used by Zamboura either as background surfaces or pasted on the works. She works on handmade pieces of paper glued on and sewed on fabric (pieces of clothe, gauze, curtain). The big sized paintings in which the pictorial space, the landscape is rendered like a map, look like tapestries. The materiality of the painting, the painting as a material object, the notion of embroidery, of handwork, which is directly connected with the female sensitivity and the female habits especially of the traditional societies, have certainly a special semantic gravity here. The frames of some paintings constitute an organic part and parcel of them, with their embellishments, their ornaments (tulles, beads, pins) and their colour, and underline this idea of the artist for the painting. It is an idea connected with the artistic process, as we realize by the total inspection of her work. Zamboura's paintings express a complex network of personal experience, memory, imagination, which is also shaped on the palimpsest of the layers on the painting's surface. In the pictorial space chaos and order co-exist interactively, design and color run dynamically through each other, giving birth to figures, forms and structures, sometimes concrete and recognizable and sometimes abstract. Attractions and repulses, opposite trends with their intensity contribute to the effectiveness of the image that "swings" almost constantly between the representational and the abstract quality. This ambiguous, boarder- line situation becomes tangible by the unstable, constantly transformed balance between the surface and the background of the image, between the colors and the forms, between the solid and the fluid, between the concentration and the looseness as a motif as well as a painting process. This dialectic process marks a great part of Zamboura's painting with significant semantic results. This visual effect animates in front of the viewer the "ritual" of the creative act. The viewer might think that the images continue to pulsate through the process of their creation on the canvas, which is not simply an inert substratum, but a "living body" suffering along and participating decisively on its own conditions in the creation of the picture. The vitality, the energy emerging from the painted surface by means of the expressionistic -idiosyncratic gesture, the tracks of the thick paint, the corporeal quality of the painting matter, mark also her landscapes (especially the series "Seasons"). In these landscapes the place, the nature, seen usually from above in a panoramic view, is perceived as a universe in constant creation, in a fluid mobility of transmutation within the circular flow of the cosmic order, with metaphysical extensions. The geological figures blend with the rough modelling, with the colors that are molded with light, with the purely pictorial "events". The limits between the figurative detail and the essence of painting seem to be constantly redefined, creating new "fields" for the visual perception of the image. The tactile material through its elaboration is invested with meanings. It becomes vehicle of potential interpretations, a generative agent of associations. The expressiveness of the materials and of their handling has always been a fundamental component of Zamboura's art. The pictorial "incidents" with their notional charge are a constant presence, but the works are never anecdotal. The tree, the water, the fire, the stairs that lead to heavens (?), the naked human in nature, the archaic- primitive element, all these are present with their original depicting force and their metaphorical contents. The lack of coherence, the fragmentariness, the repetition compose the space-time of narration in these paintings. With her intervention-installation in Yeni-Mosque, a monument with multiple significances (It was a mosque of the islamized Jews and later an archeological museum) Zamboura promotes her searches in issues of existential nature, issues of identity - difference, of self - knowledge. Her research is extended through time and has an intercultural dimension. The artist mixes elements, ideas, figures and representational codes from Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Her works, like monumental flags, like carpets of prayer, with their intense physical presence and their loud polychromy converse in many ways with the monument that receives them, with its identity, its historical uses, its spirituality and aura, its architectural morphology, its decoration. The human and the divine, the earthly and the transcendental, the individual and the collective, the personal subjective time and the time of history meet in the "junction" of art. With her own artistic ways, Zamboura refers to and comments on the religious rituals and their symbolisms, their elliptical but apocalyptic language, their significances. The visual and the expressive functionalism of the shapes, of the forms, of the clearly defined color fields, of the repeated motives with their rhythm, the flowing motion and the calligraphy of the delicate lines in contrast to the rigid graphic rendering, the sensual richness of color with references to the valuable materials of worship, the ornamental element with its various side references in the context of (each) religious art; all these are the main types of the artist's alphabet and syntax. The opposite movements and directions, the levitation, the unstable balance, the centripetal and the centrifugal movements, the oppositions along with the connections, the emblematic symmetry, the frontal hieratic immobility are also vital tools for the construction of the pictorial space, for the enhancement of the images' content and "ethos". The light has a leading part in the formation of this mystic world, in the illusionary impressions, in the relation between the surface and the background with its symbolic connotations. These works are loci of a metaphysic, spiritual reality despite their evident handmade nature and the tactile sense that emerges from them. The works invite to courses of the eye and of the mind in the transcendental universe that the artist literally and metaphorically surveys from many points of view. Avoiding the trap of the easy "archeological" approach and look, Zamboura composes a substantial communication with the space, with the monument, corresponding at the same time to contemporary requests and answering issues about the function of the work of art and its perception, in terms of a multi-dimensional aesthetic experience. Aphrodite Kouria |
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