Helidon Gjergji | |
---|---|
Born | 1970 |
Nationality | Albanian |
Education | Academy of Arts in Tirana, Academy of Fine Arts, Naples, Italy |
Alma mater | Northwestern University, Chicago |
Known for | Contemporary art |
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Helidon Gjergji (born 1970 in
Shkodër,
Albania) is a contemporary artist who works in various media.
Helidon Gjergji was born in Shkodër and raised in Tirana, Albania, where he studied art and earned a BFA from the Academy of Arts in Tirana. After Albania's borders opened in 1991, he moved to Italy, where he studied visual arts further, obtained a degree from the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples, Italy, and travelled across Italy and Europe. In 1997, he moved to Chicago, where he earned an MFA in Art Theory and Practice from Northwestern University, Chicago, and had his first American exhibitions. He currently lives and works between New York City and Tirana.
Throughout his career, Gjergji has worked in a variety of mediums, from painting, to media installation, and to architecture.
Beyond his site-specific work for exhibition venues, Gjergji also produced monumental works of public art. For the Facades Project section of Tirana International Contemporary Art Biennial 4 (2009), he was invited to paint the façade of an oversized Stalinist building, which he overlaid with contemporary icons of the digital age. For the Project Biennial 3 in Konjic, Bosnia & Herzegovina (2015), which commissions artwork for the atomic bunker of the former Yugoslavia, he created for one of its rock-ribbed tunnel-like corridors a hall of mirrors in which the slogans of militaristic video games constantly appear. For Manifesta 8 (2010), he created an olfactory installation out of marketplace spices associated with the ethnic communities resident in Murcia (Spain).
Gjergji was also one of the three directors of Tirana Open, an international contemporary art festival of the visual arts, film, architecture, music, and literature. He has taught at the State University of New York, Parsons New School of Design, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Northwestern University, and Northeastern Illinois University.