Henry Krokatsis b. 1965
Henry Krokatsis (b.1965 London) lives and works in London utilising a wide range of materials, from found wood to smoke, used votive candles and old discarded mirrors. He has an MA from the Royal College of Art, London. Selected solo exhibitions include House of the Indifferent Fanatic, Borders Sculpture Park, Berwickshire (2019); Saunakabin, Jerwood Gallery, Hastings, Sussex (2018); Household Faith, Vigo Gallery, London (2018); Henry Krokatsis with Vilhelm Hammersøi, Ordrupgaard Museum (2015); Origin of the Black Rainbow, Galeria Leme, Sao Paulo (2013); Part Time Paradise, David Risley Gallery, Copenhagen (2012) Themes and Variations, Guggenheim Venice (2011). Krokatsis is represented in the collections of the Ordrupgaard Museum, Denmark; David Roberts Art Foundation, London; New Art Gallery Walsall and the UK Government Art Collection.
-
HENRY KROKATSIS
Galeria Leme | Widows, Orphans & Strangers 7 May 2025Galeria Leme, São Paulo Opens on 17 May 2025Read more -
HASSAN HAJJAJ
PHOTO ANNUAL AWARDS 2020 FOR BEST MAGAZINE/EDITORIAL 20 November 2020DJ Portfolio By Hassan Hajjaj, 2020 Publication: Vanity Fair A portfolio of DJ portraits shot in Los Angeles and Las Vegas.Read more -
HENRY KROKATSIS
EXHIBITING WITH Hammershøi IN DENMARK 11 June 2015Ordrupgaard Museum Ordrupgaard, Vilvordevej 110, Charlottenlund, Denmark 1 June – 8 August 2015 Krokatsis is exhibiting his mirror works in the Hammershøi room of the...Read more -
HENRY KROKATSIS
EXHIBITS IN DENMARK 11 June 2015Art Park Ordupgaard Vilvordevej 110 DK-2920 Charlottenlund, Denmark 11 June 2015 – 10 June 2016 EVENT DETAILS Henry Krokatsis's Confession Box 'Confiteor' will be exhibited...Read more -
HENRY KROKATSIS
NEW PERMANENT SCULPTURE UNVEILED 28 April 2015Turning Tree Ladywell Fields Park entrance from Anderson Road, Lewisham from April 2014 We are delighted to announce that UP Projects, working in partnership with...Read more -
HENRY KROKATSIS
HENRY KROKATSIS PRESENTS ORIGIN OF THE BLACK RAINBOW AT GALERIA LEME 21 February 2013HENRY KROKATSIS PRESENTS ORIGIN OF THE BLACK RAINBOW AT GALERIA LEME 19 FEBRUARY - 16 MARCH 2013 AV. VALDEMAR FERREIRA, 130 | SÃO PAULO SP...Read more
-
Henry Krokatsis: Prost*
26 April - 2 June 2024 Wellington ArchVigo Gallery is delighted to present Prost*, a solo exhibition by British artist Henry Krokatsis . This year-long installation transforms the interior space of Wellington Arch, creating a functional yet...Read more -
HENRY KROKATSIS
SAUNAKABIN – Jerwood Gallery, Hastings 27 January - 16 September 2018Jerwood Gallery Rock-A-Nore Rd, Hastings TN34 3DW Kabin takes the form of a handcrafted wooden architectural structure drawing on the grammar of the small, feature-rich buildings typically found in British...Read more -
HENRY KROKATSIS: HOUSEHOLD FAITH
12 January - 10 February 2018 Vigo Gallery, Mason's Yard"I'm not interested in perfection, I'm drawn to the imperfect. Imperfection holds fluidity and unpredictability. Critically, imperfection stirs empathy. Making these works is a way to interrogate my ideas about the instability of our relationship to permanence. They're also a way of playing with the sensory and emotive qualities of materials and pre-existing objects to create a perceptual transformation. This leads us towards understanding the nature of change - what we perceive as stable and unstable." H. Krokatsis in discussion with E.KelleyRead more
These mirrors have been retrieved, meticulously cut to fit into each other and wall hung to create a delineated surface, bringing them, awkwardly, into the realm of painting. Krokatsis manages to transform not just these objects' material nature but also their functionality and status. Presented in this way, rather than look into them, we look at them, their neutral indifference disappearing as one begins to compare the subtleties in their surfaces, much as one examines the surface of a painting; age, patina and technology bearing down on the relative qualities of reflection.
These works exist at the intersection of the spiritual and the mundane. They traverse the border and exploit the gap between a functional object and an object of aesthetic fascination. Because of this, it's more useful to see them not as art to make sense of the world but rather as art as a spell, as an act of faith.
Although mirrors (especially these, found in junk shops and car boot fairs) belong to the commonplace, they were once regarded as sacred objects, mystical instruments for finding the truth. Later they transformed into secular objects of great value. At the beginning of the 16th century, an elaborate Venetian mirror at auction was valued at 3 times the price of a painting by Raphael. Today, because they are common and because of their perceived neutrality, we pay the mirrors around us little attention, although they create amongst other things, identity, illusion, vanity and imitation.
Some of these mirrors are turned, showing the cadmium, copper or aluminium coated back -opening up it's own peripheral history. The Etruscans for example, engraved the back of bronze polished hand mirrors with scenes of daily life, myths and erotica. These engravings became important, collectable and continued to be made always on the back of a mirror though they really didn't need to be.
In the Jewish tradition, when a family member dies, all the mirrors in the house are turned around to face the wall, backs showing. There are many theories as to why - the Kabbalists reason that dark spirits come to visit families in mourning, they enter and become visible through mirrors so turning them is a way of preventing these spirits from entering. Another theory is that they are turned because mirrors reflect the physical, and mourning is a time for spiritual contemplation.
Front and back, these materials offer many associations to play with. It's these associations that Krokatsis works with - the elements that are cut loose, allowed to drift and resettle, transfiguring the commonplace.
For Household Faith press inquiries please contact Pia Austin-Little: pal@vigogallery.com -
HENRY KROKATSIS
KABIN – Frieze Sculpture Park, London 5 October 2016 - 8 January 2017Frieze Sculpture Park S2 Regents Park, London NW1 4LL DOWNLOAD SCULPTURE PARK PLACEMENT Kabin appears as an ambiguous architectural structure that can be accessed internally and also rotated externally by...Read more -
DANIEL CREWS-CHUBB – LEONARDO DREW – IBRAHIM EL-SALAHI – MARCUS HARVEY – HENRY KROKATSIS – JAMES CAPPER – KEITH COVENTRY
CONTINUUM. SUMMER SHOW 28 June - 17 August 2016 Vigo Gallery, Mason's YardVigo GalleryRead more -
KADAR BROCK – HEYWOOD & CONDIE – LEONARDO DREW – HENRY KROKATSIS – PENNY LAMB – DUNCAN MACASKILL – NIKA NEELOVA – GABRIE
BRAND NEW SECOND HAND – Vigo Gallery, London 14 October - 10 November 2014Vigo Gallery Vigo Gallery presents Brand New Second Hand , an exhibition that brings together 14 international artists in whose practice destruction and creation are intertwined, who create new forms...Read more -
ULULATION
BOYLE FAMILY – KADAR BROCK – BIGGS & COLLINGS – LEONARDO DREW – MARCUS HARVEY – HENRY KROKATSIS – AYAN FARAH – JASON MARTIN – Vigo Gallery, London 8 October - 9 November 2012 Vigo Gallery, Mason's YardVigo GalleryRead more -
LONDON TWELVE
MATTHEW BURROWS – BIGGS & COLLINGS – HEYWOOD & CONDIE – HASSAN HAJJAJ – MARCUS HARVEY – HENRY KROKATSIS – OLIVER MARSDE – City Gallery of Prague 29 June - 23 September 2012City Gallery of Prague The Stone Bell, Old Town Square, Prague EXHIBITION CATALOGUE Curated by Toby Clarke Participating artists: Jonathan Baldock, Matthew Burrows, Biggs & Collings, James Capper, Cedric Christie,...Read more -
GRID
Vigo Gallery, London 23 May 2012 - 15 June 2013Vigo Gallery Artists Include: Leonardo Drew - Keith Coventry - Dadamaino - Michael Samuels - Chris Succo - Penny Lamb - Mark Francis - Nicky Hirst - Henry Krokatsis -...Read more -
BRITISH. AN EXPLORATION OF BRITAIN'S CULTURAL IDENTITY
HEYWOOD & CONDIE – MARCUS HARVEY – HENRY KROKATSIS – PENNY LAMB – ZAK OVÉ – KEITH COVENTRY – HEW LOCKE – NEAL TAIT – Vigo Gallery, London 17 April - 11 May 2012Vigo Gallery The exhibition explores cultural identity in the context of contemporary Britain. What does it mean in the 21st century to be British? Who can and can't consider themselves...Read more -
HENRY KROKATSIS
Peggy Guggenheim Gallery, Venice 15 October - 1 January 2011Peggy Guggenheim Gallery Dorsoduro, 701-704, 30123 Venezia VE, ItalyRead more

