Eyddos We Tags Graff

Overall made of canvas 100% cotton. It has a contrasting front zip fastening. The armhole finish is raw edge and the bottom part has a conventional length. The fit is straight, creating a wide and comfortable worker silhouette that allows for free movement. The fit is straight, creating a worker silhouette, wide and comfortable so it can join the body movement.
Mokek, 2021. Cities - Montevideo Exhibition.

Purple
Regular price $800 USD
Sale price $800 USD Regular price

EXHIBITION CITIES

Each city is a microcosm that reflects the tensions between the particular and the universal, between the individual and the collective. Cities, with their own cultural essence, become spaces of resistance against globalization. In a world where borders are blurring, cities remain territories of dispute, intersections of multiple forms of identity.

Traveling the world in search of connection is a deeply human exercise— a conscious act of unraveling the complexities of diversity. In this accelerated process of homogenization and digital nomadism, speed becomes an illusion, while real value lies in the ability to connect, to understand the essence of each place, and to question imposed paradigms.

At Eyddos, we embrace cultural interconnection not as an act of reconciliation, but as a disruptive force, a confrontation with established structures. We choose to embrace differences as a way to challenge our own cultural, social, and territorial truths. Art should not only dress our bodies; it must be the music that defies imposed rhythms, the language that refuses to conform to pre-existing norms.

EXHIBITION CITIES: MONTEVIDEO

Montevideo is a city that refuses to be confined to time —a place where modernity meets the past, and where melancholy becomes a way of being, a scent of its own. The watercourse along the Río de la Plata stretches like a metaphor for a horizon that never quite arrives, a tension between what is near and what remains distant.

“…One day I’ll see you happy. The day the wind takes you away…” – Durazno y Convención, Jaime Roos (1984)

In Montevideo, art seeps into the streets, the markets, the very air. The drums, the poetry, the defiance of its artists become a subtle yet constant reconfiguration of cultural identity through creation. In this unhurried city, art becomes an act of awareness and social critique —a call to pause, to think beyond the surface.