Yannis Mitarakis

Yannis Mitarakis (Greek: Γιάννης Μυταράκης; Alexandria, Egypt, 1897/98 - Athens, Greece, 1963) was a Greek landscape painter.

Biography

He was born in 1897[1][2] or 1898[3][4] in Alexandria and he was member of the Greek community of Egypt. He studied agronomy in Paris from 1915 till 1921. During his years in Paris he took painting courses at A. Lohre Academy and La Palette.

Mitarakis exhibition activity started in 1922 in France. He returned to Greece in 1929 and settled in Athens where he spent the rest of his life. He was member of various Greek artistic groups and contributed to many domestic and international exhibitions. Mitarakis participated to the Biennale of Venice (1934, 1936 and 1940[4]), Biennale of São Paulo (1958), Alexandria etc., the Guggenheim's contest (along with fellow Greeks artists Yiannis Spyropoulos, Panayiotis Tetsis, Spyros Vassiliou and Giorgos Gounaropoulos) etc.[4] He died in Athens on 23 February 1963.[4]

Yiannis Mitarakis dealt mainly with landscape painting. His basic inspiration was the Greek landscape. He also formulated an expressionist idiom where fauve colours dominate.[4]

gollark: Thanks!
gollark: Oh, good idea, I didn't think of that, there's no actual reason they can't just use a mutable reference.
gollark: So every recursive invocation of it creates a new hashmap. This is really not ideal.
gollark: See, the main pattern matching function which matches (and binds variables in) patterns returns an option of a hashmap of bindings.
gollark: I'm relatively sure that wouldn't work.

References

  1. Benaki Museum: (YANNIS MITARAKIS (1897-1963)
  2. BiblioNet:Μηταράκης, Γιάννης
  3. Municipality of Chios: Γιάννης Μηταράκης.
  4. Greek landscape, 19th - 20th century, National Gallery and Alexandros Soutzos Museum, Athens, 1998, p. 199.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.