Athena Tacha (; b. 1936 in Larissa, Greece), is a multimedia visual artist. She is best known for her work in the fields of environmental public sculpture and conceptual art. She also worked in a wide array of materials including stone, brick, steel, water, plants, L.E.D. lighting, photography, film, and artistsâ books. Tacha's work often was inspired by the frontiers of science and an unflinching observation of her own behavior and body.
Tacha was born in 1936 in Greece. She received an M.A. in sculpture from the Athens School of Fine Arts in Greece (1959); an M.A. in art history from Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio (1961); and a Doctorate in aesthetics from the Sorbonne in Paris (1963). After her studies, she worked as the curator of modern art at the Allen Memorial Art Museum of Oberlin College, organizing contemporary art exhibitions (including Art In The Mind, 1970). In 1965 she married art historian Richard Spear. She has published two books and various articles on Auguste Rodin, BrâncuÃÂi, Nadelman and other 20th-century sculptors. From 1973 to 2000, she was a professor of sculpture at Oberlin College. After moving to Washington, D.C. in 1998, she became an affiliate of the University of Maryland, College Park. Tacha's life and career are richly documented in a three-day interview (2009) as part of the Oral History Program of the Archives of American Art, which houses Tacha's, films, slides, and papers.
One of the first artists to develop environmental site-specific sculpture in the early 1970s, Tacha has won over fifty competitions for permanent public art commissions, of which nearly forty have been executed throughout the U.S. One of these public works was a two-acre sculptural landscape in downtown Philadelphia, Pennsylvania entitled Connections within Matthias Baldwin Park. She has had six one-artist shows in New YorkâÂÂat the Zabriskie Gallery, the Max Hutchinson Gallery, Franklin Furnace, the Foundation for Hellenic Studies, and the Kouros GalleryâÂÂand has exhibited in numerous group shows throughout the world, including the Venice Biennale. She produced a body of textual and photographic conceptual works and poetic studies, many of which were published as artist's books.
Athena Tacha's artist books were printed between 1970 and 2014. An interactive online display of the artist books and other printed materials can be found at Printed Matter, Inc.The pocket books series are twenty-seven small folded books, similar to a zine that were often sold in a plastic sleeve. In The Way My Mind Works, Tacha writes about her schizophrenic mind, her ruminating mind, her orderly mind. Others in the pocket series examine everyday life. The larger artist books focus on geometry, space, and minimalism. A Dictionary of Steps displays diagrams of steps. In addition, Tacha explored self portraiture, in works like Gestures and Expressions.
In 1989, a retrospective of more than 100 of Tacha's sculptures, drawings and conceptual photographic pieces was held at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta. It included large color photographs of her executed commissions and was accompanied by a fully illustrated catalog, Athena Tacha: Public Works, 1970-88 (introductory essay by John and Catherine Howett). The same year, she had an exhibition of new work, over 50 sculptures and drawings, as well as two large temporary installations, at the Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art, also accompanied by a richly illustrated catalog (with an essay by Thalia Gouma-Peterson).Small Wonders: New Sculpture and Photoworks at the American University's Katzen Arts Center, Washington, DC, 2006, had a fully illustrated catalog with essays by Anne Ellegood and Brenda Brown (reinstalled in New York at Kouros Gallery in 2007). She was represented by the Marsha Mateyka Gallery in Washington, D.C.
A 40-year retrospective (over 100 works), "Athena Tacha: From the Public to the Private," opened at the Contemporary Art Center (State Museum of Contemporary Art) in Thessaloniki, Greece, Jan. 16 - April 11, 2010. It presents for the first time all aspects of Tacha's artâÂÂfrom large outdoor commissions, to "body sculptures" and photoworks, to conceptual art and filmsâÂÂwith a bilingual catalog (164 pp., 113 color illustrations). Afterwards, the exhibition traveled to Larissa and Athens.
Tacha's sculptures and photo-works are in many American museums and private collections, including the Art Institute of Chicago, the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, the Buffalo AKG Art Museum, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum, the National Building Museum, the National Gallery, Athens, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Yale University Art Gallery, and the Agnes Gund Collection.
Books on Tacha's work:
Main solo exhibition catalogs:
Several of Tacha's New York exhibitions have illustrated catalogues -- Massacre Memorials (Max Hutchinson, 1984), with an essay by Lucy Lippard; Vulnerability: New Fashions (Franklin Furnace, 1994), a conceptual art piece critiquing the fashion industry; and Athena Tacha: Shields and Universes (Foundation for Hellenic Culture, 2001).