XpatAthens

XpatAthens

We are excited to announce that XpatAthens has partnered with Celebrity International Movers as the official sponsor and service provider for our new section dedicated to Relocation Greece. This partnership blends unparalleled cultural insight with professional logistics for individuals, families, and businesses.

Celebrity is a relocation specialist with four decades of experience in the industry; they deliver seamless, end‑to‑end relocation services for expats, digital nomads, families, and businesses moving to, from, or within Greece. 

Celebrated for our deep local expertise, this partnership empowers XpatAthens to share a full service portfolio—ranging from relocation and visa support to tax guidance, property consulting, and business setup assistance. Our relocation offerings simplify administrative processes such as AMKA/AFM registration, bank account opening, and residency permits like Digital Nomad & Golden Visas, and much more!

By combining XpatAthens’ intimate knowledge of living and working in Greece with Celebrity’s logistical prowess, together we offer unmatched peace of mind when it comes to relocation services in Greece.

Some of our partnership highlights include:
> Integrated relocation support from pre-move orientation through to move and arrival support.
> Comprehensive practical assistance, including visa, tax, property, legal, and insurance guidance.
> Secure, full‑service moving and settling-in solutions, including home search, and property management.
> Bilingual support and concierge services, ensuring smooth transitions and cultural integration.

 
For more information or to inquire about tailored relocation services, please contact:
XpatAthens through our contact form here.
Celebrity through their website here.
This is Loco is hitting the street food scene in Crete for the very first time — and they’re bringing bold bites and epic flavors with them!

Get ready for bold spices, mouthwatering street eats, and the kind of vibrant food vibes that only Latin America can deliver. 
  • The Vegan Lentil Burrito: Prepare for a flavor explosion! Loaded this with perfectly smashed lentils, sweet roasted peppers, creamy avocado purée, and a tangy vegan sour cream. It's hearty, healthy, and unbelievably delicious!

  • Burrito de Pollo: Inside a soft flour tortilla, you'll find tender grilled chicken, zesty pickled cabbage, and a smoky chipotle mayo that brings it all together.

  • Tacos de Pollo con Salsa Verde: Two are better than one, especially when they're chicken tacos! Nestled in warm flour tortillas, you'll savor juicy grilled chicken, crisp pickled cabbage, and that irresistible chipotle mayo, all topped with a vibrant salsa verde.

  • Tacos Pibil: Slow-cook succulent pork infused with the sweet tang of pineapple and the gentle warmth of guajillo pepper. Finished with bright pickled onions and fresh cilantro, these tacos are a true experience.

🗓️ Festival Dates & Hours:

Friday, June 13 | 17:00–24:00
Saturday, June 14 | 17:00–24:00
Sunday, June 15 | 12:00–24:00

** Free entry for kids under 11 and individuals with special needs

Come hungry. Leave happy. See you there!
A Journey to Vourvoulos (Not the One on Santorini)

From the first page, Fire on the Island transports you to the lesser-known Vourvoulos — not the Santorini village, but a fictional coastal town in Greece where beauty and hardship coexist. Through deeply evocative writing, Timothy Jay Smith doesn't just paint a scene; he places you right there. You can feel the sun and sense the sea breeze in the air. This is a Greece that tourists rarely see, raw, real, and heartbreakingly human.

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Plot: Fire, Secrets & Soul

Greek-American FBI agent Nick Damigos arrives to investigate a string of suspicious arsons. As the mystery slowly unfolds, so do the lives of the villagers, complex, conflicted, and deeply intertwined. But while the fire is the plot’s ignition point, the heart of this book lies not in whodunnit suspense, but in its intimate human storytelling; its exploration of grief, identity, belonging, and resilience.
Smith uses the thriller structure as a vessel to explore something much bigger: the emotional and social layers that make up real communities facing real crises.

Characters & Greek Reality: A Village That Feels Alive

What makes Fire on the Island stand out is how deeply rooted in Greek life it feels. Smith doesn’t simply set his story in Greece, but he captures the rhythms, customs, tensions, and nuances of Greek village life with startling accuracy.

The characters, from Vassoula, the unapologetic village siren who flirts with fire in every sense, and Ridi, the Albanian immigrant, to Takis, the gay man and fierce and rebellious Athina, who represents a restless Greek youth. They all reflect different aspects of Greek society and especially, its contradictions.

Even secondary details reflect real Greek life: the stray cats, the gossip in cafés, the mingling of tradition and modernity. And then there is the church, not just a backdrop but a living part of the village ecosystem. In Vourvoulos, as in most Greek communities, the church isn’t only spiritual; it’s social, cultural, and often political. It's where people gather, judge, confess, celebrate, and mourn.
Whether it’s the tolling of bells or the priest appearing as an authority or social figure, the presence of the church helps anchor the novel’s events in a deeply Greek context. Its role is essential, just like in many real Greek villages, where faith and tradition often shape the boundaries of freedom, love, and identity.

By incorporating the church, along with its influence, its expectations and its (not always) silent rules, Smith once again adds another layer of realism to the story. It becomes clear that in Vourvoulos, as in much of Greece, the past is never fully past, and institutions like the church continue to hold both comfort and constraint.

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Ready to dive into the story? Get your copy of Fire on the Island HERE!

Feminism & The Matriarchal Undercurrent
 
What may not be obvious at first but becomes strikingly clear is the feminist undercurrent running through the novel. Women, in all their forms and power, are the true emotional and moral anchors of this story.

You have Shirley, the English expat who came all the way from Australia, full of wit, experience, and unflinching strength. Then her daughter Lydia is the force of reason, the one who refuses to accept things at face value. She’s determined to complete the puzzle, to do her own research, to uncover what’s really going on beneath the surface, and she’s not afraid to wrestle with the norms of her community if that’s what it takes. And finally, Lydia’s daughter, Athina, full of fire, questioning everything around her, already a force of disruption in a rigid society.

These three women — grandmother, mother, and daughter — form a matrilineal triad, a modern Greek matriarchy, standing firm in a patriarchal setting. They don’t dominate with violence or ego, but with intelligence, emotion, and endurance. They challenge gender roles with their actions, choices, and refusal to be anyone but themselves.

Themes: Humanity, Hardship & Grief

Timothy Jay Smith masterfully blends social issues with personal, emotional journeys. Fire on the Island it’s about how people survive, adapt, and care in a world full of complexities. Beneath the sun-drenched beauty of Greece lies a community dealing with issues that feel all too real:
  • The refugee crisis, shown not as an abstract problem but through human faces and suffering, especially in Jura’s story who may not be a refugee but experiences the luck of many
  • Xenophobia, both casual and systemic, echoing wider European tensions
  • The suppression of LGBTQ+ identities, especially in small, deeply traditional societies
  • Suicide and the lifelong trauma of adoption, and how these wounds quietly shape lives
  • Sexual firsts, revealing how coming-of-age is rarely what we expect
And deeply present in all of this is griefraw, real grief. Grief for a child lost. Grief for a partner lost. Grief for a life not fully lived. Grief for love denied, for freedom never found, for a sense of home that may never exist.

Smith doesn’t dramatize grief; he honors it. He allows his characters to sit with it, wrestle with it, and sometimes, rise from it. Jura’s heartbreaking loss, Takis’s internal despair, Athina’s aching restlessness, they all carry forms of grief that are deeply human and universally felt.

Yet even with all this weight, the novel doesn’t collapse under it. What emerges instead is a strong current of resilience and compassion. The village is fractured, yes, but some people still show up, with food for refugees, with water, with care for stray animals, with truth, even when it’s difficult. And that’s what Fire on the Island ultimately celebrates: the endurance of kindness, even in a world set ablaze.

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A Moment That Hurts (and Stays)
 
There are many moments in the book that strike the heart, but one scene that stands apart is that of Jura, the immigrant woman who nearly drowns, not metaphorically, but literally, trying to reach Greece. She survives, but her child does not. This moment, soaked in Ancient Greek tragic irony, is written with such emotional precision that it nearly breaks you. It's a quiet, crushing moment that forces the reader to sit with the weight of grief, helplessness, and injustice.

But Light Breaks Through

Despite the heartbreak, there’s joy, connection, and community. There’s the group giving sandwiches to refugees. There’s the care for stray cats, a subtle yet deeply Greek act of grassroots compassion. There’s Dingo, the stray dog Nick saves. In a world full of problems, these small gestures shine bright.

Language: A Truly Greek Story 

The use of Greek language throughout the book is not only charming but grounding. Smith sprinkles Greek expressions and words with effortless precision, giving the reader the feel of the language without ever making it confusing. For readers unfamiliar with Greek, it’s a fun introduction. For Greek readers, it’s a sign of deep cultural respect and accuracy.

It feels like a mini Greek lesson, wrapped in storytelling, one that adds local flavor and roots the novel even deeper in its Aegean soil.

Lived Experience: Why This Story Feels Authentic

What makes Fire on the Island resonate so deeply is that it’s not written from a distance. It’s clear that Timothy Jay Smith has lived and breathed Greece not just visited, but truly experienced it. The villages, the people, the way the sea smells in the morning, the way gossip travels faster than the wind, all of it speaks to someone who knows this world from the inside. And that’s what good writing is: writing what you know, and doing it with honesty and heart.

The characters don’t feel imagined, they feel observed, absorbed, and lovingly recreated. Every one of them could be someone you’ve met in a Greek village. And, perhaps, in a way, they are. There’s a quiet sense that pieces of Timothy himself are woven into each of these people, that their struggles, desires, and contradictions are not only reflections of Greek society, but of a writer who sees and feels deeply.

This is why Fire on the Island doesn't just tell a story but transports you in a lived reality, one only someone who truly knows Greece could portray so truthfully.



Conclusion: A Book That Bears & Shares Real Feelings

Fire on the Island is more than a mystery. It’s more than a Greek village story. It is a novel of human truths, full of emotion, contradiction, warmth, and shadows.

It gives you what every great book should: the feeling that you’ve lived somewhere else, that you’ve felt other lives, that you’ve walked in someone else’s shoes under someone else’s sun. And when you close the final page, you feel a little changed, a little more aware, a little more compassionate, a little more human.

If you’re looking for a book that speaks to the soul, that delivers both tension and tenderness, that brings Greece alive in ways most travel guides never could, Fire on the Island is for you.

Ready to dive into the story? Get your copy of Fire on the Island HERE!

About the Author

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Timothy Jay Smith
 is a critically acclaimed author with a lifelong passion for Greece. His travels and experiences, from working as a sociologist in Greece to aiding refugees on Lesvos, have inspired his immersive, character-driven stories. An award-winning novelist, screenwriter, and playwright, Smith’s work has garnered numerous accolades, including the Gold Medal in the Faulkner-Wisdom Competition for Fire on the Island not to mention that his screenplay adaptation of it was named Best Indie Script by WriteMovies. His diverse career has taken him around the world, from the streets of Istanbul to the jungles of Africa, giving him a unique perspective that brings depth and authenticity to his writing. Smith’s novels and screenplays have won top honors in competitions, and his stories resonate with readers for their vivid settings, complex characters, and rich social commentary.
Thursday, 05 June 2025 12:26

Greek Language Support

Learn Greek With Ease 
 
Learning the local language is one of the most meaningful ways to feel connected in a new country. Whether settling into life in Greece as an individual or as a family, access to the right language training can ease the transition and open the door to authentic local experiences.
 


Find the Right Language Path

Everyone learns differently—some prefer private tutors, others group classes or digital apps. From everyday conversation to business Greek, flexible options are available to suit your learning style, age, and reason for learning the language.

Language Support Can Include:
  • Trusted recommendations for language schools and teachers.

  • Assistance with enrollment and scheduling.

  • Learning options for children, adults, and professionals.

  • Online and in-person formats.

  • Suggestions tailored to personal goals and timelines.

So Much More Than Words

Learning Greek is all about building confidence, forming relationships, and feeling like you truly belong in your new environment. If you're curious to begin learning Greek, get in touch with us to explore your language learning options.
Thursday, 05 June 2025 12:17

Cross-Cultural Guidance

Feel at Home in Greece
 
Starting life in a new country, apart from changing addresses, is very about adapting to an entirely different culture. Designed for newcomers to Greece, cross-cultural support provides the insight and practical tools needed to understand and embrace local customs, social norms, and professional life with confidence.

 
Navigate Greek Culture with Ease

From everyday conversations to workplace dynamics, adjusting to Greek culture can be both enriching and challenging. Tailored cultural orientations help individuals and families build awareness, reduce culture shock, and ease into life in Greece, both personally and professionally.

Some Cross-Culture Topics Can Include:
  • Local values and daily routines.

  • Social etiquette and communication styles.

  • Understanding professional and workplace culture.

  • Helping children adjust socially and at school.

  • Comparative insights based on the assignee’s cultural background.

  • Practical advice for smoother integration into the community.

Support for Individuals, Couples & Families

Whether you're relocating solo or with loved ones, cultural preparation plays a key role in making the transition feel natural. This kind of support goes far beyond information—it's about creating connection and a sense of belonging.

Get in touch with us to learn more about integrating into Greek culture with confidence!
Wednesday, 04 June 2025 16:16

Immigration & Legal Support in Greece

A Clear Path Through Greek Bureaucracy
 
Relocating to Greece often means navigating a complex legal and administrative landscape. Through our reliable relocation partners, support is available to simplify each step and ensure full compliance with local regulations.
 


Immigration & Residency Procedures


Each relocation case is unique, with different legal requirements depending on nationality, visa type, and purpose of stay. Personalized guidance helps individuals and families meet Greek immigration standards, with step-by-step assistance throughout the process. When needed, representatives accompany applicants to public offices for submissions and follow-ups.

Greek Tax Registration & Financial Setup

Establishing a financial identity in Greece is a key early step. Assistance may include:
  • Issuing a Greek Tax Identification Number (AFM)

  • Setting up TaxisNet credentials

  • Transferring tax files to the correct local office (DOY)

  • Opening a Greek bank account

Access to Healthcare Services

Enrollment in Greece’s healthcare system requires specific documentation and appointments. Help is available for:
  • Registering for AMKA or AMA numbers

  • Enrolling with EFKA (social security)

  • Scheduling and coordinating necessary appointments

Residency & Work Permits

Whether relocating from within the EU or outside, expert support ensures the correct documentation is obtained. Services may cover:
  • Entry visa preparation

  • Applications for residence permit and work permits

  • Renewal processing or changes in legal status

Other Legal & Administrative Services

Support extends beyond core immigration needs, covering everyday requirements that may arise when settling in Greece, such as:
  • Vehicle registration

  • Conversion of EU driver’s licenses to Greek licenses

  • General assistance with legal paperwork

Are You Planning a Move to Greece?

With the right guidance, moving to Greece can be a breeze! Legal, tax, and residency requirements can be met efficiently, leaving more time to enjoy the new chapter ahead. Get in touch with us for more information.

In 2023, the legendary Margarete Roeder Gallery in New York City presented the five Bronx-based women artists in the exhibition Bronx Fivefold: Harmonious  Convergence, highlighting the diversity of their visual expression, as well as the  creative collaboration born out of 20 years of friendship and artistic comradeship in  an art scene that is both unique and dynamic. 

Extending this multifaceted solidarity and wanting to bring a piece of the South Bronx to Athens, the artists present works in a variety of media in the show Made in the  South Bronx. They reveal ways in which their daily contact with this particular area of  New York City, as residents and active artists, has influenced their visual practice.  Their themes include the importance of the cultural heritage bestowed upon us by  indigenous peoples, the tragic destruction of life and nature due to human brutality,  the transformations of neighborhoods due to gentrification mechanisms, and the  personal changes in our emotional and spiritual worlds caused by the interaction with a rapidly changing global socio-political environment. 

Formally trained as a painter, Mexican-American Blanka Amezkua's creative  practice is greatly influenced by Mexican popular art and culture, from papel picado  to comics. She combines traditional and contemporary techniques, as well as socio cultural mythologies and philosophies to preserve evidence of the past in the present. Honoring the wisdom of the indigenous people of the Americas, Amezkua has made  research on medicinal plants and flowers from the first book of medicine created in  the Americas, the Codex de la Cruz-Badiano (1552). The visual result is a series of  papel picado pieces dedicated to the Cempasuchil flower and the California poppy, created in collaboration with maestro don Rene Mendoza from Huixcolotla, Puebla,  Mexico in August 2024. Underscoring her ancestors' respect and admiration for plant diversity, Amezkua pays tribute to the valuable knowledge of Mexico's ancient and  modern culture and its special contribution to world art and science. 


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Carey Clark's video installation includes elements that she has been exploring for  many years in her current practice. Her idiom involves merging different figurative  elements to convey a reality that is not dictated by visual observation, but  encapsulates the emotions and sensations experienced. Exploring a new body of  work that incorporates her long term interest as a figurative painter in picturing  alternate landscapes, cityscapes and portraits through montages of diverse  elements, Clark shows a series of painted images-portraits of her Bronx  neighborhood combined with projections of videos displaying diverse places from  which she got inspiration for her paintings. The overlap between the moving and  painted images, the interplay between movement and stillness, allude to the endless  impermanence of our world and the multiple rapid or slow, positive and negative  transformations it creates- though often invisible to our eyes and not perceived by our direct perception. 

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Linda Cunningham's work is concerned with time, transience and contradictions,  with a particular interest in the architectural and structural remnants of present and  past cultures. Her images employ a fluid, calligraphic line and drawing form. With  compelling forms she often challenges the viewer to accept the sometimes  discomforting content of her works. In Cunningham's mixed media South Bronx  Waterfront Sagas series, her materials and images merge, revealing a broken history of the South Bronx, an area that was once a haven for clean air and greenery. The  themes addressed are environmental concerns in relation to industry, urban blight  and loss of the natural environment, as well as her concern for her Bronx home area  facing the mechanisms of gentrification. Athens residents share a number of parallel  concerns, which reveals the universality of socio-political strategies aimed at  economic gains at the expense of community cohesion and economic equality, as  well as the environment and history of the area. In another series of works,  Cunningham addresses the consequences of the climate crisis, depicting the  devastating hurricanes that have hit America in recent years. 

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Mimma Scarpini
is an Italian artist living in New York who creates with various visual media. Her work is characterized by both an abstract and figurative idiom, engaging  in a dialogue with both the European figurative and abstract art traditions. The  triptych drawing on paper entitled Black Eden depicts a burnt Garden of Eden, which, according to the Bible, was originally created by God as a Paradise for humans. The  medium Scarpini uses, charcoal, is itself burnt organic matter (wood), intensifying the idea of the irreversible evil perpetrated by the human hand. In the mixed media work  on paper Maria Mesa fleeing tear gas at the border, she is inspired by the Pulitzer  Prize winning Kim Kyung Hoon's photograph of migrants running away from tear gas  at the border with Mexico. Hoon’s photograph captures a paradox, underlined by  Scarpini’s use of color: as the woman and her children flee from tear gas, their  shadows appear to move in the opposite direction, as though returning to the very  place they are trying to escape. This aesthetic detail reflects key elements of the migrant experience: while they flee from danger and economic hardship, they also  leave behind their culture and history—an identity that calls them back, like the  irresistible pull of a siren’s song.

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Tammy Wofsey's art attempts to condense the essence of the natural world within  the confines of paper. Paper acts as the conduit that gives life to all her prints. Her  creative pursuit is guided by the goal of creating a deeply human connection to our environment and evoking a sense of slowing down over time. In this series the artist  prints blue mountains on large flat paper, engraves them and folds them. According  to the artist, the folded paper contains a memory that cannot be erased, telling a  story that can be revived at any time with specific stimuli. Images evoke memories  and vice versa, and connections between past and present are effortlessly activated:  the smoke from the forest fires in California and Canada erases the artist's memories of her home state of Colorado and the view from her apartment in the South Bronx,  respectively. The viewers can pick Wofsey's works in their hands and process them  as they would flip through the pages of a memory-filled photo album. She hopes her  work will give viewers the time to 'slow down', reflect, experience positive memories  and aim for a better balance between their inner and outer worlds. 


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Opening: Thursday 26th June, 19:00 
Opening hours: Wednesday-Sunday, 17:00-22:00 

The untold epic saga of the Sacred Band premieres on June 12 and 13 in the presence of the director Lefteris Charitos and the film’s participants 

Army of Lovers directed by Lefteris Charitos, tells the untold epic saga of the Sacred Band, an elite force of 150 pairs of male lovers who became the most formidable warriors of the ancient world. 

As a team of international archaeologists and historians is re-examining the newly uncovered evidence and gaining unprecedented insight into the story of the Sacred Band, their findings challenge us to rethink our understanding of Ancient Greece and our perceptions of heroism, gender and love across time.

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The film is produced by Anemon (Greece) and Epo-Film (Austria) and is a co-production with ERT, ZDF / ARTE and ORF in association with SBS, Hearst Networks, History Italy, TV5 Québec and with the support of the Hellenic Film & Audiovisual Centre – Creative Greece (Tax Rebate and NextGenerationEU programme), Fernsehfonds Austria and Creative Europe. It is distributed by ZED.

The screenings are co-organised by CineDoc, the American School of Classical Studies at Athens and ANESIS open-air cinema, with the support of the Museum of Cycladic Art. 


To watch the trailer, please CLICK HERE!


About The Film

The Sacred Band was formed by the city of Thebes in 379 BCE to end Spartan domination. Fighting for four decades undefeated, it was annihilated by the forces of Philip II of Macedon and his son Alexander in the Battle of Chaeronea. Buried on the battlefield where they fell, the 300 were forgotten by history, until pioneer archaeologist Panayotis Stamatakis discovered the mass grave in 1880.

Stamatakis never published his findings and the grave was covered up, leading some historians to claim that the Sacred Band never existed. It was only in 2019 that a missing skeleton was found in the basement of the National Archaeological Museum of Athens, as well as the excavation logs with detailed drawings of the mass grave: they depicted an army of 300 men likely lying in pairs, their arms linked together.

A team of international archaeologists and historians re-examines the newly uncovered evidence, gaining unprecedented insight into the story of the Sacred Band. Their findings challenge us to rethink our understanding of Ancient Greece and our perceptions of heroism, gender and love across time.

Directed by Lefteris Charitos, Army of Lovers uses forensic archaeological research, unique archive, ancient artworks and animations to tell the story of the rise and fall of the Sacred Band and reveal the enduring relevance of antiquity in contemporary culture. The film’s central characters include archaeologist and skeletal biologist Maria Liston (University of Waterloo, Canada), historian James Romm (Bard College, USA) and contributors John Ma (Univ. of Columbia), Paul Cartledge (Univ. of Cambridge), Reine-Marie Berard (French National Centre for Scientific Research), Peter Krentz (Davidson College), Thierry Lucas (Collège De Marly), Jennifer Ingleheart (Durham University) and Panagiotis Iossif (Museum of Cycladic Art/Radboud University, Nijmegen).

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SCREENINGS SCHEDULE

  1. ATHENS – Thursday, June 12 2025 | Cotsen Hall 

Address: The American School of Classical Studies at Athens (9 Anapiron Polemou st. Kolonaki) 

Limited number of available seats. Free entry on a first-come, first-served basis; doors open at 18.00 and the screening starts at 19.00.  

More information HERE!

The film will be screened with English subtitles. A Q&A will follow after the screening with director Lefteris Charitos and archaeologists Panagiotis Iossif and Maria Liston, followed by a wine reception.

Those arriving early can also visit the multimedia exhibition, Imag(in)ing Samothrace: From Homer to the HoloLens, hosted in the Makriyannis Wing of the American School of Classical Studies. Curated by Bonna D. Wescoat, Ellen M. Archie, Rebecca A. Salem and designed by Mikri Arktos (Andreas Georgiadis and Vivi Gerolymatou), it brings together objects from the 15th to the 21st century to chronicle how artists expressed their physical, emotional, and intellectual encounters with the island. Highlights include rare Renaissance drawings of Samothracian antiquities by the antiquarian Cyriacus of Ancona, shown in Greece for the first time.

  1. ATHENS – Friday, June 13 2025 | Anesis Open-Air Cinema 

Address: 14 Kifisias Av., Athens

          Doors open at 20.15 and the screening starts at 21.00.

          Presale HERE! 

The film will be screened with Greek subtitles and a Q&A will follow with director Lefteris Charitos and the film crew, moderated by Thodoris Antonopoulos (Journalist, LiFO).

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About CINEDOC 

CineDoc is based in Athens, Greece; it showcases and (selectively) distributes award-winning greek and international documentaries. The screenings are organised in collaboration with the French Institute of Greece, Danaos Cinema, the Thessaloniki Film Festival, the CineDoc Volos and the Municipality of Volos, the "Simeio" Cultural Space in Rethymno, the Cyclades Preservation Fund (CPF) and the Thalassa Foundation. Screenings are accompanied by parallel events; the aim is to encourage dialogue, inspire collective actions and raise awareness on crucial subjects, such as the environment, gender equality, inclusivity, education, history, and more.

Additionally, CineDoc collaborates with cultural institutions, universities and various organizations, taking part in conferences, festivals and cultural events. Moreover, through CineDoc Island network the team organises documentary screenings both in Greek islands (Cyclades, Sporades, Ionian Islands and the Dodecanese) and across Greece, in collaboration with local cultural partners and film clubs.

Follow CineDoc on facebook and instagram.

More info: https://www.cinedoc.gr  | cinedocanemon@gmail.com

A Site-Specific Series of Artistic Room Takeovers at Mona Athens, Launching June 6th
Two Artists. Two Rooms. Three Months of Living Art.

This summer, House of Shila unveils SPACE REIMAGINED—a new, immersive series of artist-led room transformations at Mona, its acclaimed boutique hotel and cultural hub in downtown Athens.

For its inaugural edition, contemporary artists Elise Wouters and Angeliki Stamatakou were invited to inhabit and radically reimagine the very hotel rooms they resided in during their artistic residencies. Each was given a blank slate—physically and conceptually—to create an experience that blurs the boundaries between art installation, storytelling, and hospitality.

Launching on June 6th, 2025, the time-sensitive interventions (on view through September) unfold across Mona’s signature penthouses, offering guests a deeply personal and tactile encounter with living art—available for both exploration and acquisition.

Curated and produced by House of Shila, SPACE REIMAGINED is inspired by the playful concept of rearranging space through the eyes of an artist—rooms become extensions of personal worlds, charged with narrative, texture, and memory.

This launch coincides with the debut of Mona’s rooftop—a members-only hideaway offering curated wines, soundscapes, and sweeping views of Athens.

Mona Suite by Elise Wouters

London-based Belgian film photographer Elise Wouters has transformed Mona’s Suite into a meditative space of memory, femininity, and poetic introspection. Her installation unfolds as a sensory dialogue between image, word, and texture.

Rooted in repeated stays at Mona’s Suite, Wouters’ contribution features hand-painted silver prints of her analogue self-portraits, printed on delicate washi paper and installed against the room’s textural backdrops—aged patinas, gauze curtains, and painterly walls. Her work explores impermanence, vulnerability, and the traces of lived moments.

“I’m always in communication with the past,” says Wouters. “That’s how memory works—you return to a moment, and by returning, it changes. That’s the beauty.”

Guests will find handwritten love letters, found postcards, and a curated selection of her annotated books—offering intimate access into her creative world.

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“There’s always a dialogue between photography and writing. I photograph what I can’t say, and I write about the photos I didn’t take.”

In collaboration with Parisian lingerie label Mavelle, Wouters and House of Shila have co-designed an exclusive limited-edition silk dress, available at Mona and online via the House of Shila e-shop.

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Penthouse 16 by Angeliki Stamatakou

Greek sculptor Angeliki Stamatakou reimagines Penthouse 16 as a dreamlike sanctuary where ritual meets sculpture and natural light sculpts the mood. Her space is one of emotional resonance—raw, grounded, and intuitive.

“Taking over a room is about changing how a guest feels,” says Stamatakou. “They live with my work, not just pass by it. It becomes part of their experience.”

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Drawing from subconscious landscapes and organic formations, her sculptural interventions feel both ancient and otherworldly. 

Black clay mirrors—her first works in this medium—anchor the suite alongside a signature sculptural coffee table, lighting elements, and mysterious non-functional forms that feel unearthed rather than made.

“They’re like fossils formed over millennia—objects out of time and place.”

A curated playlist composed by the artist completes the atmosphere, enriching the spatial experience with sound and deepening its emotional layers.

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Opening Night & Rooftop Launch
June 6, 2025 | 19:00–23:00

On opening night, both transformed penthouses will be open to the public. Guests are invited to explore the installations, meet the artists, and acquire select pieces, available for a limited time.

The evening culminates with Mona’s first rooftop party of the summer, featuring guest DJs and curated natural wines.

The rooftop remains open to members throughout the season, Thursday to Saturday. New member applications are available here.

SPACES REIMAGINED continues from June through September 2025, with the installations accessible to guests staying in Mona Suite and Penthouse 16. Select works will also be available for purchase via the House of Shila e-shop.

This marks the first of an ongoing residency series—an invitation to reimagine hospitality through the lens of contemporary art and collaboration.

About House of Shila

House of Shila (HOS) is a creative studio in the pursuit of aesthetic pleasures. HOS creates distinctively designed spaces, serving as laboratories of experiential storytelling. Dedicated to all things sensually beautiful, our work is multi-disciplinary spanning from boutique hotels (Mona and Shila), design, creative direction, curated pop-up events and publishing. HOS runs an artist-in-residence programme and members club between its locations in Athens and New York. Collaborating with creatives from around the world, we are driven by a desire to showcase inspired work that unites a community of artists, designers, and entrepreneurs, while supporting talent at all stages.
XpatAthens recently visited with Ithaca Laundry at their most central location at Koumoundourou Square in Athens. We experienced the profound impact their unique service has on the local community. Every Tuesday and Thursday, the Ithaca Mobile Laundry Unit arrives at this central square at 10 AM, offering clean clothes, social and psychological support, as well as food to those who need it most. What we discovered was more than just a laundry service—it was a beacon of hope, dignity, and community for vulnerable individuals living in central Athens.

Basic necessities like food and water are often seen as the most urgent needs for vulnerable populations, there is one service that might not immediately come to mind but it’s just as vital. Ithaca Laundry, a mobile laundry service founded in Athens, is doing something extraordinary; it is restoring dignity, offering hope, and providing much-needed support to the homeless, the elderly, and people from all walks of life.

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The Birth of an Idea: A Vision for Change

The story of Ithaca Laundry began in 2016, when 3 students (Thanos Spiliopoulos, Fanis Tsonas, and Andili Rachouti) decided to bring a powerful idea to life. Inspired by a similar initiative in Australia, they set out to create the first mobile laundry service for the homeless not just in Greece, but in Europe. In April 2016, Ithaca’s mobile laundry unit hit the streets of Athens for the first time, launching what would become an ongoing mission to provide clean clothes to those in need. By January 2017, Ithaca began operating daily, growing both in the number of people it helped and the scope of its services. 

Fast forward less than a decade, and the Ithaca team is greater than ever, as is the work they do. From those early days, when resources were tight and their team small, Ithaca has grown into a comprehensive support system for vulnerable groups, constantly expanding its outreach and impact in the community.

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Restoring Dignity, One Load at a Time

What makes Ithaca Laundry’s work truly extraordinary isn’t just the act of washing clothes; it’s the dignity it restores. For many, the idea of fresh, clean clothes might seem like a small luxury. But, for those without a home, those considered homeless, often invisible and struggling, as well as those living in overcrowded conditions or facing challenges such as lack of access to basic necessities like electricity and water, doing laundry can be an overwhelming challenge. Ithaca’s services go far beyond cleanliness, they are offering people an essential form of respect. It’s a heartfelt gesture, simple yet profoundly powerful, that says: “We see you and you matter.”

Ithaca Laundry doesn’t stop at laundry. They also collaborate with other organizations to distribute food to those in need. The individuals that came to take a bag of food were not only homeless individuals—their were elderly citizens who struggle to cook for themselves, people living in cramped homes with too many others, and even those who, despite having a roof over their heads, are financially strained and just need a bit of support to get through a tough time.

The beauty of Ithaca’s work is that there’s no discrimination: help is offered to anyone who needs it. Whether someone is coming for clean clothes or a bag of food, the help is provided with open arms, no questions asked. From the moment the Ithaca van rolls up at 10 AM, people are already there, waiting in line with bags of dirty laundry in hand. Many of them arrive early, not just for clean clothes, but for the sense of community that Ithaca provides.

As we observed, the connection between Ithaca and the people it serves is palpable. The gratitude in the eyes of those who take a bag of food, or get their laundry done, is unforgettable. The visitors are welcomed warmly, and as we stood there, it was impossible not to notice how every person who crossed our path smiled, waved, or said hello—a clear sign of the sense of belonging they feel. The sense of hope and appreciation was evident in every interaction.

What struck us even more profoundly was how familiar the staff were with the people they serve—they knew them by name and vice versa. Ithaca’s impact is so needed and so beautifully embraced that it planted a seed of hope and gratitude in our hearts, reminding us of the power of compassion and community.

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Social Support & Job Counseling: Going Beyond Laundry

In 2021 Ithaca launched a social service to provide psycho-social support to vulnerable groups, assisting with everything from medical appointments to navigating the complexities of daily life. Many people visiting Ithaca don’t just need clean clothes; they need someone to help them reconnect with the systems and resources that can help them rebuild their lives. The social worker is there to lend a helping hand and offer solutions to these everyday challenges.

Moreover, Ithaca Laundry is a place where collaboration thrives. They work with other NGOs and organizations to ensure that each individual receives the support they need. It’s a network of care, a reminder that when we come together, we can make a lasting impact.

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A Path to Employment: Empowering Through Work

In addition to the laundry services and social support, Ithaca also runs a program for employment reintegration. Many of the staff members are people who were once homeless themselves, now given the opportunity to work in a supportive and structured environment. Through this program, they gain skills, experience, and confidence that can help them re-enter the job market. To date, 26 people have managed to reenter the job market and gain equal opportunities to find a job again. This sense of continuity is invaluable; it shows that Ithaca is not just a temporary fix, but a sustainable solution in helping people reclaim their lives and their independence.

And now, it becomes evident what lies behind the name Ithaca. It's about the journey. The journey of reintegration and recovery, much like the poet Konstantinos Kavafis wrote: "The journey is more important than the destination." It’s not just about providing food or washing clothes but helping people rebuild their lives, step by step. We listened to stories of individuals who lost everything in an instant, and yet, they were standing tall with the support of Ithaca.


Want to lend a hand with Ithaca's laundry efforts? Join as a volunteer — click here to get started!

Ithaca Laundry's Weekly Schedule

Ithaca Laundry operates at different locations throughout the week to serve vulnerable communities. On Mondays, their services are available at the Club for UNESCO – Piraeus and Islands (Mikalis 51, Piraeus) from 10:00 to 14:00. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, they are stationed at Koumoundourou Square, from 10:00 to 17:00. Wednesdays are dedicated to the Community Center “Cheirapsies” in Corinth, where the team is present from 11:00 to 16:00. On Fridays you can find them from 11:00 to 14:00 again at the Club for UNESCO – Piraeus and Islands (Kotyoron 35, Piraeus). Through this rotating schedule, Ithaca ensures access to its mobile laundry services in various key areas where the need is greatest.

Every month, at Koumoundourou Square, the Pop-Village arrives to create a warm, welcoming space of care and human connection. It’s a day where all three pillars of Ithaca’s mission combine in one meaningful event. Visitors come together to exchange smiles, thoughts, feelings, and experiences, creating a sense of belonging and support. The volunteers and staff of Ithaca join forces with others to offer a variety of services, ensuring that everyone who walks through the door feels valued and cared for:

  • Laundry services with the Mobile Unit
  • Psychosocial support
  • Employment counseling
  • Haircuts by The Box Hair Studio
  • Distribution of essential items

The Youth Behind Ithaca: A Generation of Hope

What truly stood out to us during our visit was the youth and energy of the team behind Ithaca Laundry. These young individuals—many of whom started out as interns or volunteers—are dedicated to the cause and passionate about making a real difference in the world. It’s inspiring to see the next generation taking on such important work for the greater good. It’s a reminder that hope isn’t just about the future; it’s about what young people are doing today to create a better tomorrow.

We spoke with some of them, and the conversation was nothing short of inspiring. The common question we asked all of them was, "What made you want to work here and do this?" And the answer was always the same: "What we take back, because giving only makes you richer." It may be a cliché, but it's one of those truths that resonates deeply. Each team member had their own unique perspective and background. Sure, they came from different academic paths, but the common thread was their deep willingness to do good.

For example, Michalis' drive to help stems from his childhood, as his siblings are part of a vulnerable group. Marille started as a intern and simply couldn’t stop helping; it is kinda addictive. We also met Erica, who had just started her internship at Ithaca only three days before. Despite being so new, she had already felt the love and support that surrounds this beautiful action—there’s a certain energy here that you can’t ignore.

And then, there’s Konstantinos, who is responsible for the daily operations and the welcoming and service of Ithaca’s beneficiaries. He once found himself in a difficult place, but with Ithaca’s support, he made his way back. We witnessed firsthand the power of love and care for others. The entire atmosphere was filled with a sense of mutual respect and a deep commitment to giving back. It’s amazing what can be accomplished when people genuinely care for one another.

In closing, we'd like to leave you with something Thanos, a volunteer at Ithaca team shared with us: "We are all potentially homeless." It’s a reminder that life can change in an instant, and it’s through empathy and community that we can make the world a better place for all.


Want to lend a hand with Ithaca's laundry efforts? Join as a volunteer — click here to get started!

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