Menu
Washingtoner
  • Home
  • Financial
  • Technology
  • Non-profit
  • Boeing
  • Services
  • Daryl Guberman
  • Aerospace
  • Business
Washingtoner

Where Were the Women? Reframing the Greek Revolution Through Contemporary Art
Washingtoner/10319884

Trending...
  • Spokane Teacher Arrested For Sex Crimes Against A Child
  • Training Lofts Launches $1,099 Unlimited Training Membership Featuring Semi-Private Coaching, Nutrition Support, and Recovery Services
  • Conexwest: Shipping Containers Are Powering the Next Generation of Bitcoin Mining Infrastructure
Moscho Tzavela Manto Mavrogenous Souliotisses- Dance Of Zalongo
New exhibition #WeAreGreekWarriors brings overlooked heroines into today's cultural conversation in celebration of Women's History Month

DETROIT - Washingtoner -- The women of the Greek Revolution, long absent from dominant historical narratives, are brought into focus in a new exhibition at the Hellenic Museum of Michigan, where history is reconsidered through the lens of contemporary art.

#WeAreGreekWarriors: From the Greek Revolution to Today: The Power of the Heroines of 1821 Lives in Every Woman presents a compelling body of work by contemporary artist Ramona Pintea, whose large-scale paintings reimagine historical female figures with strength, complexity, and emotional depth. The exhibition brings together contemporary painting, bold prints, and cultural programming to revisit a moment in history through a different lens, one that is intimate, human, and strikingly relevant today.

Through expressive figuration, bold color, and psychologically charged compositions, Pintea reframes these women as dynamic and multidimensional subjects. Her work captures the breadth of their influence, from commanding naval fleets and financing revolutionary efforts to sustaining diplomacy, preserving culture, and supporting their communities.

In several paintings, the heroines are depicted with their children, introducing a rarely explored dimension of their lives. These works foreground the intersection of leadership and motherhood, positioning these women not only as figures of resistance but as anchors of continuity and care."By reinterpreting these women through a contemporary visual lens, we bring past and present into dialogue," says Pintea. "The individual portraits coexist with collective representations, emphasizing both personal agency and communal resilience. Through this approach, history becomes a living continuum rather than a closed chapter."

More on Washingtoner
  • U.S. Government Contracts in Excess of 38 Million Secured Through Partner, Establishing Multi-Year Defense Revenue Platform Through 2032: $BLIS
  • New Report Reveals Surprising Trends in Ohio Airport Accidents
  • Why Your Berberine Failed: RevGenetics Unveils the Absorption Gap Solution
  • WCC Kitchens and Cabinets Featured on Selling Houses Australia
  • Cat Hunt Simulator : Burrow & Pounce Lands on the App Store

The #WeAreGreekWarriors initiative, created by Angie Xidias, founder of One Bean Marketing in 2023, was sparked by a simple but compelling question: "Where were the women in the Greek Revolution?" That question resonated internationally, bringing long-overlooked figures into focus and generating widespread attention, featured in media such as Marie Claire (Greece), The National Herald (U.S.), Neos Kosmos (Australia), and across the USA Today Network. Building on this momentum, Xidias co-curated a full museum exhibition at the Hellenic Museum of Michigan, translating the initiative into a physical space where these stories are now experienced through art.

Art became the natural next step in bringing these narratives forward. Pintea's work, known for portraying women as strong, dynamic, and multidimensional, offers a powerful visual interpretation of the heroines of 1821, positioning the historical figures as fully present and relevant subjects. "When we begin to tell their stories collectively, we see that these women were not side notes in history, they were leaders, strategists, and architects of change," says Xidias. "Their legacy lives on in women everywhere today."

This renewed visibility of the heroines of 1821 connects directly to ongoing conversations about women's leadership today. Their actions, strategic, decisive, and carried out within complex personal realities, continue to resonate in a contemporary context where questions of representation, voice, and authority remain central. The exhibition places these women within that continuum, inviting a reassessment of how leadership is seen, understood, and embodied across time.

More on Washingtoner
  • Shincheonji Marks 42nd Anniversary: From a Basement to a Denomination Growing by Tens of Thousands Annually
  • Jackets for Jobs Hosts Smart & Sexy® Day Detroit for Women's History Month
  • Tint Academy Training in Dallas Texas: Learn Window Tint & PPF Installation
  • $IBG accelerates toward transformative merger with BlockFuel as $6 million raise fuels dual-industry growth strategy: N A S D A Q: IBG
  • High-Growth Power Infrastructure Play Targets AI Boom: 1606 Corp. Executes Aggressive Texas Expansion Strategy: 1606 Corp. (Stock Symbol: CBDW) $CBDW

A series of public programs, including lectures, film screenings, performances, and immersive engagement expands the exhibition, creating a multi-dimensional experience that connects generations and diverse communities through the arts.

#WeAreGreekWarriors: From the Greek Revolution to Today: The Power of the Heroines of 1821 Lives in Every Woman', runs March 19-May 17, 2026. The Hellenic Museum of Michigan is located at 67 E. Kirby Street, Detroit, MI. For more information, visit hellenicmi.org.

About Ramona Pintea
Ramona Pintea is a contemporary visual artist whose work explores feminine authority, presence, and historical agency through expressive figuration and symbolic portraiture. Her work has been exhibited internationally and collected in more than twenty countries. She is also the co-creator, alongside Angie Xidias, of the global #WearYourCrown❤️ campaign, celebrating women's empowerment, authenticity, and leadership. For more information, visit https://ramonapintea.com/

About the Hellenic Museum of Michigan
Founded in 2013, the Hellenic Museum of Michigan hosts arts and cultural exhibits, special events, and virtual exhibitions that share the richness of Hellenic heritage and preserve the contributions of Hellenic culture in shaping our world today and in the future.  For more information, visit  https://www.hellenicmi.org/ or call 313.871.4100.

About One Bean Marketing
One Bean Marketing develops impactful, purpose-driven initiatives through strategic storytelling, with a focus on empowering women. For more information, visit https://onebeanmarketing.com/

Media Contact
One Bean Marketing
press@onebeanmarketing.com


Source: One Bean Marketing

Show All News | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on Washingtoner
  • CCHR Warns: Psychiatric Diagnoses Without Biological Proof Now Used to Justify Euthanasia
  • Impact Filtration Appoints Alejandro Sturniolo as Head of Sustainability to Engineer High-Performance, Water-Positive Infrastructure
  • Spokane: 2025 Longitudinal Systems Analysis Shows Decreased Need for Homeless Services, Increase in Successful Exits to Stability
  • 106 Years Strong: The Liberty Group Celebrates a Century-Plus of Service and Unveils a Unified Family of Companies
  • Airport Transportation Reaches All Five Continents Through Global Transportation Partner Network
  • Acquisition of Israeli Defense Manufacturing Platform to Accelerate AI-Driven Autonomous Systems: VisionWave Holdings, Inc.: (N A S D A Q: VWAV)
  • HRC Fertility to Celebrate Grand Opening of New Beverly Hills Location During National Infertility Awareness Week
  • AktieGo Publishes Editorial Feature Examining Decentralized Power Infrastructure and Hydrogen Energy Deployment
  • Greg Wier Announces the Release of More Than Just Luck
  • Nieuwe standaard in webdesign: Professionele website laten maken voor het MKB vanaf €249 door Websitepioniers
  • Conexwest: Shipping Containers Are Powering the Next Generation of Bitcoin Mining Infrastructure
  • Hypnotherapy Finder Announces Official US Wide Launch After Successful Soft Launch
  • ANAB's Fraud Taints AS9100, ISO 9001, ISO 13485 Certs (2018-Present) – Stop Paying Registrars
  • Melzi Job Coach Launches on iOS and Android: A Privacy-First AI Career Engine Built for Execution
  • Glow MedSpa Announces New Laser Treatments and Hosts Community Celebration Event in Camas, WA
  • Spokane Teacher Arrested For Sex Crimes Against A Child
  • A Stolen MacBook Leads Spokane Police To Discover Multiple Stolen Items And A Burglary Arrest
  • Benchmark International Facilitated the Trans BT Matheson Painting and an Undisclosed Buyer
  • Training Lofts Launches $1,099 Unlimited Training Membership Featuring Semi-Private Coaching, Nutrition Support, and Recovery Services
  • American Properties Realty, Inc. Leadership Attends NAHB International Builders' Show in Florida
_catLbl0 _catLbl1

Popular on Washingtoner

  • Tacoma: Applicants Sought for the Public Utility Board - 114
  • Male In Custody After North Spokane Drive By Shooting - 109
  • Ice Melts. Infrastructure Fails. What Happens to Clean Water?
  • Spokane: Water Wise Wednesday Workshops Begin March 4
  • Primeindexer Google indexing platform launched by SEO Danmark APS
  • Amicly Launches as a Safety-First Social App Designed to Help People Build Real, Meaningful Friendships
  • Spokane: Shoplifting Incident Becomes A Felony Crime After Store Employee Is Assaulted
  • The Legal AI Showdown: Westlaw, Lexis, ChatGPT… or EvenSteven?
  • Diversified Roofing Solutions Strengthens Industry Leadership With Expanded Roofing Services Across South Florida
  • Spokane: Indian Canyon Golf Course Opens Thursday, March 12, 2026

Copyright © 2026 washingtoner.com | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Contribute