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Kyttara; Cells

Kyttara; Cells © EP 2021

Cyprus, 2005

Cement, inkjet on film, aluminium and glass, 60 x 60 cm

Purchased from the artist in 2007


Theodoulos Gregoriou meshes archaeology with geometry in his artistic practice. Between 1976 and 1981, he studied at the Institution de Arte Plastice ‘Nicolae Grigorescu’ in Bucharest on a scholarship from UNESCO, organisation to which he has subsequently donated some of his works. He continued his curriculum on a scholarship from the French government and enrolled at the Cite Internationale des Arts and École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Born and raised next to a Bronze mine, Gregoriou is guided by the geographical and memorial potential of material and substance. Directed by Aristotle’s principle ‘Matter brings in itself the principle of motion and change but takes shape and image with the intervention of the mind’, he seeks to unite seemingly opposed (chronological, spatial, cultural, geographical, chemical) elements through art. Thanks to abstract structural patterns, the artist allows these foreign components to co-exist. Using digital technology, the artist bypasses his process’ ‘nowness’ in search of something more timeless, less bound in the moment. KYTTARA is illustrative of Gregoriou preferred motifs: the square and the circle, both complemented by the improvised organic swirl of a mineral-looking substance.
TIMELINE
01PE20080029905

Kyttara; Cells

Theodoulos GREGORIOU

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  • 1997

    José María Gil-Robles

    José María Gil-Robles served as President of the European Parliament from 1997 to 1999.


    Signature of Amsterdam Treaty

    Signing of the Amsterdam Treaty. The Treaties establishing the European Communities and a few related acts were signed in the presence of the President of the European Parliament, José María Gil-Robles.

  • 1998

    Belfast Agreement

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  • 1999

    1999 European elections

    Voters from 15 EU countries go to the polls to elect 626 MEPs. The centre-right EPP-ED becomes the largest political group for the first time.


    Nicole Fontaine

    Nicole Fontaine served as President of the European Parliament from 1999 to 2002.


    EURO

    The euro was introduced to world financial markets as an accounting currency on 1 January 1999, replacing the former European Currency Unit (ECU).


    Amsterdam Treaty

    The Amsterdam treaty simplifies and broadens the application of the codecision lawmaking procedure. Parliament gets the right to approve the Commission president.

  • 2000

    Charter of Fundamental Rights

    The Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU is solemnly proclaimed after having been drafted by a European convention with the active involvement of MEPs.

    Article 13.
    Freedom of the arts and sciences. The arts and scientific research shall be free of constraint. Academic freedom shall be respected.

    Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (2000/C 364/01)


    Acquisition programme

    3rd round of acquisitions with Austria, Finland and Sweden.

  • 2001

    National parliaments exhibiton in Brussels and Strasbourg. This exhibition was created at the initiative of President Gil Robles and was officially opened on 17 December 2001 by the then President Nicole Fontaine. It consists of works of art donated or loaned by 15 national parliaments.

  • 2002

    Pat Cox

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    Euro is launched

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  • 2003

    Treaty of Nice

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    2004 European elections

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    Josep Borrell

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    Eastern enlargement

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  • 2007

    Hans-Gert Pöttering

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    Acquisition programme

    Acquisition programme of works of art from Cyprus, Czechia and Estonia following the Bureau decision from 13 December 2006


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  • 2008

    Acquisition programme of works of art from Hungary and Latvia following the Bureau decision from 13 December 2006.

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    Jerzy Buzek

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    Acquisition programme

    Acquisition programme of works of art from Poland and Lithuania following the Bureau decision from 13 December 2006


    Lisbon Treaty

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  • 2010

    Acquisition programme of works of art from Slovakia, Slovenia and Malta following the Bureau decision from 13 December 2006

  • 2011

    Acquisition programme

    Acquisition programme of works of art from Bulgaria and Romania following the Bureau decision from 13 December 2006


    (…) artistic trades constitute one of the pillars on which our cultural heritage and our economy rest (…) their continuity must therefore be safeguarded by means of appropriate mechanisms for passing on knowledge and skills, as emphasised in Parliament’s resolution of 10 April 2008 on cultural industries in Europe (…)

    European Parliament resolution of 12 May 2011 on unlocking the potential of cultural and creative industries (2010/2156(INI))

    Establishment of a temporary rotating exhibition to mark rotating EU presidencies, starting from January 2011 (…)

    The exhibition would be organised by a rotating system following the changing of the EU presidencies. Every six months, the Artistic Committee would decide on a selection of 8 to 10 works of art from the Member State concerned(…) GEDA D (2010) 41679

  • 2012

    Martin Schulz

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    Art@Europarl

    The Art@Europarl exhibition presents a small selection of 27 works, mostly paintings, by artists from 27 EU countries at the Parlamentarium, the Parliament’s visitors center. It’s the first time that the general public has direct access to part of the collection.


    The European Union gets Nobel Peace Prize

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  • 2013

    Acquisition programme

    Acquisition programme of works of art from Croatia following the Bureau decision from 13 December 2006.


    Enlargement Croatia

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    2014 European elections

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  • 2017

    Antonio Tajani

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