In Athens, the exhibition “She’s gone” with clothes of murdered women, including Topaloudi
Clothes they wore women who were murdered. A green t-shirt, jeans, a fake fur coat, a sweatshirt he once considered lucky, a top and a jacket bought for a wedding. These elements are included in the report “He is gone” (“For one empty shirt ”) that they organize two Israelis and travels around the world. Their goal is for the report to be a protest against their phenomenon homicide, as they point out. The exhibition arrives in Greece and opens on November 25 at the Kakogiannis Foundation, in co-organization with the Israeli embassy. It is under the auspices of the President of the Republic, Katerina Sakellaropoulou.
Israeli creators are the Keren Goldstein, documentary filmmaker and activist against gender-based violence and o Adi Levy, co-director of the exhibition and designer.
Among the exhibits is a garment by Eleni Topaloudi
The clothes function as silent testimonies from the lives of women, which had meaning, hope and dreams and which were abruptly and violently removed. Inside they hold stories of absence, sadness and orphanhood.
A small box with the victim’s name, date, manner and instrument of murder is placed on each garment, as well as the court sentence, if any, as some cases have not been clarified.
For Greece, one of her clothes Eleni Topaloudi, whose murder shocked the public in 2018, is included in the report, courtesy of her family, in collaboration with the General Secretariat for Family Policy and Gender Equality.
In the audio part of the exhibition, lullabies are heard, sung by women in various languages, Hebrew, Arabic, Amharic, Russian, Persian, Romanian, Moroccan, Arabic, German and Greek, a final tribute to all women victims of violence.
The aim of the action is to end She’s gone journey at the UN building in New York.
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