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Dora Economou
Installation view, 2008
Ten lo-fi, handmade assemblages constructed from inexpensive, everyday materials comprise Dora Economou’s second solo show. Walking amongst her sculptures you have the impression of thumbing through a private diary that wavers between autobiography and fiction. A list of titles (‘of current, previous and future works’) displayed on a shelf behind the sculptures helps us decode her personal references. The artist collects ‘stolen’ phrases from books and songs (from Virginia Woolf to The Cure) in a notebook, and these textual elements become the starting point for her modest sculptures. Economou’s use of materials such as fabric, wood, tape and paper, lend her works a fragile quality. Even loaded symbols are humbled through their conversion into new materials, as in Killing an Arab (all works 2008) (the title is borrowed from The Cure’s first single), where the checked motif of the