Visualizing Greece
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Jan 26, 2026 | Arts in Greece, Visualizing Greece
On the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the death of Fotis Kontoglou, the exhibition “Taximia”:...
Culture & Society
LatestGreece announced a three-year roadmap for the National Action Plan for the Safety of Journalists
Apr 20, 2026 | Culture & Society, Government
The Secretary General for Communication and Information, Dimitris Kirmikiroglou, participated as...
Reading Greece
LatestReading Greece: Penny Milia – “Poetry is inherently presence, embodiment, enactment, action”
Dec 22, 2025 | Reading Greece
Penny Milia is a poet, writer, performer and psychotherapist from Athens. Her poetry collection...
Arts in Greece
LatestKalamata Made Street Art History!
Feb 6, 2026 | Arts in Greece
Kalamata has received a major international distinction, as the mural by visual artist Kleomenis...
Creative Greece
LatestThe CirculAR Application by the National Technical University of Athens Research Team — Bringing Ancient Greece to Life
Jan 28, 2026 | Creative Greece, Innovation | Tech | Energy
The APSIM project (Applications of Situated Simulations) aims to promote the Greek culture using...
Modern Greece Unfolds
LatestNational Archaeological Museum – Memories 1940-41: The rescue of the statues
Oct 29, 2025 | Culture & Society, Modern Greece Unfolds
On the occasion of the national anniversary of October 28th, 1940, the National Archaeological...
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28th of October 1940: The Greek “Ohi Day”
Oct 27, 2025 | Modern Greece Unfolds
Destinations
LatestMountainous Greece: A Premier All-Season Destination
Apr 15, 2026 | Destinations
The promotion of mountain tourism took center stage at a recent event hosted by the Ministry of...
Education | Research
LatestInternational Program Stories / BA in Eastern Mediterranean Studies
Apr 1, 2026 | Education | Research
The web portal Study in Greece is campaigning for the promotion and international...
Rethinking Greece
LatestRethinking Greece|Ancient Texts, Modern Voices: Inside Johanna Hanink’s ‘Lesche’ Podcast
Aug 1, 2025 | Rethinking Greece
Johanna Hanink is professor of Classics at Brown University, and her work in Classics focuses on...
Ancient Greek Heritage
LatestGreece Unveils National Strategy to Protect Cultural Heritage from Climate Change
Mar 18, 2026 | Ancient Greek Heritage, Culture & Society, Government
The National Strategy for the Protection of Cultural Heritage from the Impacts of Climate Change...
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George Costakis was born in Moscow in 1913 to Greek parents from Zakynthos. He spent most of his life in Moscow, working as a driver at the Greek Embassy. Despite lacking formal training, Costakis developed a remarkable instinct for collecting early 20th-century Russian avant-garde art. He built close relationships with artists, their families, and artistic circles, and over more than thirty years assembled an extraordinary collection. At a time when avant-garde art was suppressed under Stalinist policies favoring Socialist Realism, he preserved works that might otherwise have been lost. He believed strongly in their future value and recognition. By the 1960s and 1970s, his Moscow apartment functioned as an informal museum of banned art. In 1977, he left the Soviet Union, donating 834 works to the Tretyakov Gallery. Costakis died in Athens in 1990, leaving a lasting legacy in modern art history.
The acquisition of 1,277 works from the Costakis Collection – the most important collection of Russian avant-garde art outside Russia – was completed by the Greek state in March 2000 and assigned by decision of the Ministry of Culture to the newly founded State Museum of Contemporary Art in Thessaloniki. In November 2018, the institution evolved into the Metropolitan Organisation of Museums of Visual Arts of Thessaloniki (MOMUS). Following the acquisition, the Costakis family donated the collector’s archive to the museum, comprising more than 2,000 valuable items – including manuscripts, publications, photographs, posters, artists’ notebooks, and drawings. The Costakis Collection and Archive, renowned for their scope, mobility and historical value, contribute decisively to the understanding of this pivotal chapter in the history of modernism.

Kyriakos Pierrakakis, Greek Minister of Economy and Finance, and President of the Eurogroup, said: “Euronext’s investment constitutes yet another tangible proof that Greece has made a strong return to the European forefront. The recent upgrade of the Greek stock exchange by MSCI to “developed market” status cements this trajectory. I recall that since 2013 Greece had been downgraded to an “emerging market.” In 2015, in the midst of the economic crisis, the stock exchange shut down for five weeks. This difficult period now belongs to the past. Today’s event is a clear signal that a new era is opening for the Greek economy. In this context, the strategy of Euronext, and the expansion of its presence through acquisitions, serves a core objective that we fully share: the creation of larger, stronger, and more competitive corporate entities at a European scale, as well as the facilitation of MnAs and the transition of businesses to greater size and scope.”
https://www.euronext.com/en/about/media/euronext-press-releases/euronext-inaugurates-technology-and-support-centre-athens
Access is provided via the entry point: https://e-proxeneio.mfa.gr

