Untitled
1988
Drawing, 35 x 43 x 4 cm.
Materials: pencil, paper
Collection: National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens - Donated by Bart De Baere.
Nicos Baikas writes, “when I look at a painting, I often imagine that its lower edge-that is, one of its four sides- determines the level of the water, the level of the sea. Thus, seeing coincides with breathing.”
With similar agony, as if it were a matter of survival in a world flooded with technological images suitable for mass reproduction, Nicos Baikas defends the greatness of the painted image. A pictorial alchemist, the artist asks questions that cannot be answered through other rational processes, such as the laws of Physics, but only through the individual logic of each image, systematically and axiomatically conveyed as a universal truth.
Donated by Bart De Baere to the National Museum of Contemporary Art to mark the exhibition Urgent Conversations: Athens – Antwerp, Nicos Baikas’ drawing can only be interpreted by direct viewing, as the wealth of pictorial effects that compose the image are practically impossible to reproduce. In between the gradations of black and the embossed paper, the viewer will be able to discern an enigmatic depiction of different energies – a liquid flowing from a vessel and a solid material hammered onto another surface – that is, two different events with different physical qualities are depicted identically on paper.
— Stamatis Schizakis