The B & M Theocharakis Foundation announces Stephen Antonakos: Vectors of Time and Space, a landmark exhibition celebrating the legacy of the late Greek-American artist Stephen Antonakos (1926–2013). Opening March 18, 2026, the exhibition celebrates the centennial of Antonakos’ birth in Laconia, Greece, offering a sweeping view of the artist’s prolific career and influence, and mapping the network of artistic movements and sensibilities that defines his legacy.

Vectors of Time and Space traces Antonakos’ boundless vision through six decades of creative output, foregrounding the artist’s evolving language of color, form, and luminous abstraction. The exhibition is anchored by key series from the late 1950’s, up to his most recently completed work from 2012, including Neon Panels (1980-2013), Direct Neons (1970s), Packages (1971-2006), Neon Walls (1977-2007), Alphavitos (1986-1990), Travel Collages (1987-2002), architectural models of Chapels (1992-2010), and Gold Works (2010-2013), alongside some of the artist’s more intimate sculptural works from the 1950s, 60s and 70s, that incorporate fabric, cardboard, and other common materials.

Alongside Antonakos’ own works, the exhibition brings together artworks by a selection of historically important and leading contemporary artists. A number were friends of the artist, while others were aesthetically aligned. All of them intersected with Antonakos’ arc, highlighting the enduring resonance of his ideas in the 21st Century. 

Featured in the exhibition are works by Francis Alÿs (1959-), Yiannis Bouteas (1941-2026), Christo (1935–2020), Chryssa (1933-2013), Ksenia Ender (1895-1955), Lucio Fontana (1899-1968), Ray Johnson (1927-1995), Kazimir Malevich (1879-1935), Gordon Matta-Clark (1943-1978), On Kawara (1932-2014), Judy Pfaff (1946-), Robert Ryman (1930-2019), and Fred Sandback (1943-2003), situating Antonakos in conversation with artists who were engaged with Constructivism, Light and Space, Conceptual Art, Minimalism, and other forms of geometric exploration.

The title of the exhibition reflects the complexity of Antonakos’ Greek-American identity: in English, Vectors of Time and Space, and in Greek, Postscripts of Time and Space. With the two titles, the doubling of meaning between Vectors and Postscripts draws connections between Antonakos’ assertively linear, hard-edge abstraction and several of his more emotionally layered series. A vector denotes a type of graphical representation using straight edges to construct the outline of objects; a quantity with both direction and magnitude that determines the position of one point in space relative to another. Postscripts speaks to the communicative power of time as it is encapsulated within many of the artworks in the exhibition, and especially within a show commemorating the one hundredth anniversary of Antonakos’ birth. The dual titles, Vectors and Postscripts, capture two major threads within Antonakos’ work: his precise, hard-edge abstraction and his more emotive series reflecting the passage of time.

Works on view have been generously lent by Alpha Bank Art Collection; Stephen Antonakos Studio LLC; Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI), New York; the Collection of Hellenic Diaspora Foundation; the Ray Johnson Estate / ARS, New York; MOMUS-Museum of Contemporary Art-Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art and State Museum of Contemporary Art Collections; the Gordon Matta-Clark Estate; MOMUS-Museum of Modern Art-Costakis Collection; the Onassis Collection; One Million Years Foundation; Irene Y. Panagopoulos Collection; the Fred Sandback Estate; Cristin Tierney Gallery New York (Courtesy of the Artist); Dimitris Passas Collection; the Estate of Yiannis Bouteas and CITRONNE Gallery as well as several other private collections.

An illustrated bilingual exhibition catalogue will accompany the show, featuring images of key works, archival materials, and contributions by Marina Miliou Theocharaki, Stelios Vasilakis, and exhibition curator Sara Reisman, illuminating Antonakos’ creative legacy and the evolution of his ideas across time and generations of artists.

Stephen Antonakos: Vectors of Time and Space has been curated by New York-based curator, educator, and writer Sara Reisman.

March 18 – July 19, 2026

B & M Theocharakis Foundation, Athens

1. Stephen Antonakos, I Have Seen, 2004–2005, black paint on wood with neon, 109 x 13 x 91,5 cm. Onassis Collection. Photo credit Yiannis Soulis
1. Stephen Antonakos, EGL Green Square on the Floor, 1973, neon, 121 x 121 cm. Stephen Antonakos Studio LLC. All rights reserved
Chryssa, Untitled (Blue Light), light sculpture, plexiglass, fluorescent blacklight tube, wood, 49 x 49 x 22 cm. Collection of Hellenic Diaspora Foundation. Photo credit Dimitris Christodoulopoulos
Stephen Antonakos, Package Mailed to Bob Ryman, Meant Never to Βe Opened, 1973, white paper, US postage stamps, mixed media, c. 52 x 58 x 15 cm. Stephen Antonakos Studio LLC. Photo credit Nicole Mouriño, New York
1. Lucio Fontana, Untitled drawing (for Domus Magazine cover), c. 1960, red pastel on off-white paper, 122 x 76 x 6,5 cm. Stephen Antonakos Studio LLC. Photo credit Stephen Antonakos Studio LLC. All rights reserved.
Stephen Antonakos, Untitled (dark pink strokes), 1988, silkscreen on white rag paper and then hand-cut by the artist, 73,6 x 53,3 cm (3/10). MOMUS-Museum of Contemporary Art-Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art and State Museum of Contemporary Art Collections. Photo credit Jeffrey Sturges, New York

QUOTES

“For us, the exhibition Stephen Antonakos: Vectors of Time and Space is not only a tribute but also an act of continuity. A reminder that art can function as an active pause and that light can transform the experience of time, shape it, extend it, and even suspend it.”

Marina Miliou Theocharaki, Head of Exhibition Strategy & Operations, B & M Theocharakis Foundation for the Fine Arts and Music

Stephen Antonakos: Vectors of Time and Space continues the Foundation’s commitment to presenting artists, whose vision and work transcend boundaries. Celebrating the centenary of Antonakos’ birth, the exhibition aims to construct a dialogue with major figures of modern and contemporary art that reveals, among other things, the enduring relevance of his luminous language of form and light. At a historical moment that constantly raises questions about perception and spatial experience, Antonakos’ work invites us to slow down and engage with space, time and ourselves more attentively.”
Stelios Vasilakis, Director, B & M Theocharakis Foundation for the Fine Arts and Music

“Our approach in organizing Vectors of Time and Space is to encounter Antonakos not only as an artist of formal brilliance, but as a thinker deeply attuned to perception and experience of temporal and spatial dimensions. His work expands in dialogue with the viewers’ presence, which completes each gesture.”
Sara Reisman, Curator

 

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Stephen Antonakos’ work with neon since 1960 has lent the medium new perceptual and formal meanings in hundreds of gallery and museum exhibitions first in New York and then internationally. His use of spare, complete and incomplete geometric forms has ranged from direct three-dimensional interior installations to painted canvases, Neon Walls, the well-known back-lit Neon Panels with painted or gold-leaf surfaces, and the Rooms and Chapels. Throughout his career, Antonakos conceived work in relation to its site—its scale, proportions, and character—and to the space that it shares with the viewer. He called his art “real things in real spaces,” intending it to be seen without reference beyond immediate visual and kinetic experience.

Born in Greece in 1926 and raised in Brooklyn after immigrating to the United States at age four, Antonakos emerged as a key figure in postwar abstraction. His work was included in international exhibitions such as Documenta 6 (1977) and he represented Greece at the Venice Biennale in 1997. Public commissions include major works in New York, Atlanta, Milwaukee, Athens, and Bari, among other cities. Antonakos’ work is held in collections worldwide, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art, MoMA, the Whitney, the Guggenheim, and the National Gallery in Washington, D.C., as well as many major institutions across Greece. He was a member of the National Academy of Design and received its lifetime achievement award in 2011.

Christo, Wrapped Book, 1973, book wrapped in canvas and twine, 30,5 x 28,6 x 3,5 cm. Irene Y. Panagopoulos Collection
Stephen Antonakos, Untitled (for my mother Evangelia), 1987, aluminum on wood and neon tubes, 91,5 x 88 x 11,4 cm. Alpha Bank Art Collection. Photo credit Yiannis Vaharides
Stephen Antonakos, Dream, 1962-63, mixed media, fabric pillow with woodcarved letters, 57 x 40 cm. Collection of Hellenic Diaspora Foundation. Photo credit Dimitris Christodoulopoulos

Author