- 41
Yiannis Gaitis Greek, 1923-1984
Description
- Yiannis Gaitis
- Tourists at Cape Sounion
signed l.r.; inscribed on the stretcher
oil on canvas
- 130 by 162cm., 51¼ by 63¾in.
Provenance
Exhibited
Cyprus, Galerie Polytopa, Yiannis Gaitis, November 1980
Literature
Serafini Giuliano, Yiannis Gaitis, Florence, 1982
Loretta Gaitis-Charrat, Catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre de Yiannis Gaitis, Angers, 2003, no. 1479, p. 342, illustrated
Catalogue Note
After completing his studies at the School of Fine Arts in Athens, Gaitis moved to Paris in 1954 and subsequently divided his time between these two cities. Around 1960 he developed a rich expressionistic vocabulary to fashion biomorphic forms that later gradually evolved into stereotypical human figures.
Treating this subject over and over again, Yiannis Gaitis became famous for this depiction of 'little men' - figures without specific features that represented man as the product of mass culture, whose behaviour is uniform and predictable, and who remain estranged from their fellows. These little men thus depicted the anonymity, uniformity and sterility of contemporary mass living, which implied the subjugation of individual identity to average communality, and its eventual loss in the nameless mass of the modern world.