Fractonomy

A divided island. Three languages. A dialect kept at a distance. Fractonomy physically intervenes in colonial archives to ask what speaks from the fracture. Not restoration. Not resolution. Relation.

I grew up on a divided island between three languages, and a dialect I was taught to keep at a distance. Never fully inside or outside any of these. Never a complete sentence in any one language.

I found photography the way you find something universal. A language without borders. Celluloid felt precious to me.

But this promise of singular truth, of clarity and control, is the same logic that built colonial maps and measuring instruments.

Fractonomy works with the documents those systems produced. Fragments cut from a private photographic sailing archive explode across a nautical chart of an Antillean island. Mapping pins pierce an illustration of the Sisserou parrot, named Imperial Amazon by the empire that claimed the island, set against an oceanic explorer color calibration chart, the tool that decides what color should look like. Measuring instruments attempt to quantify photographic objects, as if calibration itself is what needs to be examined.

The work does not restore what was fragmented. The whole refuses to resolve. What lives there instead is relation. The way islands speak to each other without forming a continent.

The work asks you to move closer. Something shifts when you do.

© Charalambos Artemis - Image from the Fractonomy photography project
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Exhibition View 'Fluid Persistence' @ NiMac, Nicosia Cyprus Dec2025-Apr2026. Nautical chart and fragmented photographic sailing archive.

© Charalambos Artemis - Image from the Fractonomy photography project
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Exhibition View 'Fluid Persistence' @ NiMac, Nicosia Cyprus Dec2025-Apr2026. Nautical Chart & Photographic Transparency Fragments

© Charalambos Artemis - Nautical chart, fragmented photographic sailing archive.
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Nautical chart, fragmented photographic sailing archive.

© Charalambos Artemis - Proposed exhibition rendering. Framed archival photographs.
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Proposed exhibition rendering. Framed archival photographs.

© Charalambos Artemis - Slide Viewer, 35mm mounted transparency.
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Slide Viewer, 35mm mounted transparency.

© Charalambos Artemis - Profile gauge, fragmented photographic sailing archive in 6x6cm Anscochrome metal slide mount.
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Profile gauge, fragmented photographic sailing archive in 6x6cm Anscochrome metal slide mount.

© Charalambos Artemis - Vernier caliper, fragmented photographic sailing archive in 6x6cm Anscochrome metal slide mount.
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Vernier caliper, fragmented photographic sailing archive in 6x6cm Anscochrome metal slide mount.

© Charalambos Artemis - Image from the Fractonomy photography project
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Proposed exhibition rendering. Measuring instruments, fragmented photographic sailing archive in 6x6cm Anscochrome metal slide mounts.

© Charalambos Artemis - Image from the Fractonomy photography project
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Proposed exhibition rendering. Fragmented photographic sailing archive on existing VU magazine special issue on colonisation, March 1934.

© Charalambos Artemis - Digital print mounted on foam board, fragmented photographic sailing archive, pins.
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Digital print mounted on foam board, fragmented photographic sailing archive, pins.

© Charalambos Artemis - Overlayed archival prints, fragmented photographic sailing archive, pins.
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Overlayed archival prints, fragmented photographic sailing archive, pins.

© Charalambos Artemis - Archival Print from 35mm color transparency. Private photographic sailing archive.
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Archival Print from 35mm color transparency. Private photographic sailing archive.

© Charalambos Artemis - Nautical chart, fragmented photographic sailing archive in 6x6cm Anscochrome metal slide mounts, clay. Dimensions variable.
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Nautical chart, fragmented photographic sailing archive in 6x6cm Anscochrome metal slide mounts, clay. Dimensions variable.

© Charalambos Artemis - Image from the Fractonomy photography project
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Fractonomy, 2024-2026. Proposed exhibition rendering. Framed archival photograph with single-channel video monitor on stand, looped. Floor: nautical charts, fragmented photographic sailing archive in 6x6cm Anscochrome metal slide mounts, clay. Dimensions variable.

© Charalambos Artemis - Image from the Fractonomy photography project
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Proposed exhibition rendering. Framed archival photograph and single-channel video looped. Video: Sisserou parrot, born in captivity. https://vimeo.com/1171765029