Island Hoping
Christina Dimitriadis

The project Island Hoping —an optimistic wordplay on the notion of island hopping— explores images and myths of the Mediterranean, a geographical entity, but above all an imagined reality, in which the appreciation of beauty and a collective spirit are deeply ingrained. The Mediterranean is sometimes described as a cultural space, but in fact its historical and political reality has always been more complex.​In these meticulously structured photographs, islands and rock formations emerge from the sea in an indeterminate landscape. Because of their morphology and ruggedness, the rocky shores of the Aegean islands evoke ambiguous emotions that lie between optimism, hope, and uncertainty. Christina Dimitriadis’s aesthetic approach transforms the landscape from hospitable to barren.​The starting point for the series was a black-and-white photograph of Helgoland, an island in the North Sea with a distinctive political and geographical history. It is also the birthplace, on the maternal side, of the Dimitriadis family and the beginning of a continuous biography of migration. Past and future, individual and collective flow together, making Island Hoping a hybrid of North and South.​

Edited by Delphine Bedel. Texts by Denys Zacharopoulos, Övul Durmusoglu and Kimberly Bradley. Design by Studio Lialios Vazoura.

Island Hoping ~ Christina Dimitriadis
Island Hoping ~ Christina Dimitriadis
Island Hoping ~ Christina Dimitriadis
Island Hoping ~ Christina Dimitriadis
Island Hoping ~ Christina Dimitriadis
Island Hoping ~ Christina Dimitriadis
Island Hoping ~ Christina Dimitriadis