Working across media, Tamara Kametani’s practice is largely concerned with the topics of border politics, forms of surveillance and resistance, and the proliferation of technology. She is particularly interested in the concept of techno-solutionism within the context of utopia. Her recent works explore the concept of Null Island, a point in the Atlantic Ocean with geographic coordinates 0,0 that despite its lack of a physical form is home to an abundance of data due to errors and glitches in geographic information systems. Kametani holds an MA from the Royal College of Art, London and is based in Athens.
Yoshi Kametani is an American visual artist working across photography, video, print, and sculpture currently living and working in Athens. His practice largely reflects on time, destruction, chaos, and mortality. At the core of his work is an exploration of entropy, a natural force lending itself to nihilism while embracing the inevitable cycle of rise and decay.
Nataliya Vitorovich (b. 1993, London) is an artist and illustrator working across multiple digital and print mediums, as well as product design and installation. Her distinctive style is marked out by its vivid colours and humorous scenes. She depicts playful narratives using anthropomorphic characters, stylised environments and text. She has been commissioned internationally for projects across film, music, fashion and hospitality. She is a graduate of Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, and is currently based between London and Athens.
Sofia Stevi is an artist living and working in Athens. She studied graphic design at Vakalo School of Art and Design and visual communication at Central St Martins, University of the Arts, London. Her paintings are interpretations of materiality through fluid narratives. Time and space are conflating in a universe where dream is a basic construct of everyday experience, bodies are in flux and chance acquires a permanent substance.
She has presented her work internationally in the context of solo exhibitions (Onassis Stegi in Athens; ΒALTIC Center for Contemporary Art, United Kingdom; Le Quai, Societa Della Appi, Monaco; Τhe Breeder Gallery, Greece; Galeria Pelaires, Spain; ALMA ZEVI gallery, Italy; and Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, United Kingdom) and group shows held in museums, galleries and project spaces in Greece and abroad. She has been awarded the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Artist Fellowship by ARTWORKS in 2022.
Dominic Amerena is an Australian writer, researcher and educator. His debut novel, I Want Everything, is appearing in 2025, with Summit Books in Australia and Scribner in the UK.
His fiction, essays and criticism have been published widely. New writing is appearing in The Los Angeles Review of Books and New Australian Fiction 2024.
Amerena as won numerous prizes, grants and fellowships, most recently: the Vil La Joana Residency, Hawthornden Fellowship, the Speculate Prize, an Australia Council New Work Grant, and the Alan Marshall Short Story Award.
He is represented by Grace Heifetz, at a4 Literary, I have a PhD from the University of RMIT.
Agata Ingarden graduated from the École des Beaux Arts de Paris and studied at The Cooper Union, New York (2016).
Her practice revolves around investigations in the fields of humanities, science fiction and mythical narratives. She works with multiple mediums, including installation, sculpture and video. She has exhibited in institutions and galleries in Europe and the United States including Kunstlerhaus in Vienna (2020), Nassauischer Kunstverein Wiesbaden (2020), Parc Saint-Leger (2020), Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2019), Mo.Co Montpellier Contemporain (2019) and the Frac Ile-de-France / Le Plateau, (Paris 2019).