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Gen X: Tales from the Forgotten Generation

Artists

Maurizio Cattelan, Wolfgang Tillmans, Matthew Barney, Gillian Wearing, Olafur Eliasson, Douglas Gordon, Kara Walker, Gabriel Orozco, Doug Aitken

Press release

The DESTE Foundation for Contemporary Art is pleased to present Gen X: Tales from the Forgotten Generation, a group exhibition with selections from the Dakis Joannou Collection. Curated by Massimiliano Gioni, Artistic Director, New Museum; with Calvin Wang, Curatorial Assistant, New Museum; and Taeyi Kim, Curatorial Fellow, New Museum, the exhibition will be on view at the DESTE Foundation in Athens between June 11th and November 26th, 2026. The opening is scheduled for June 10th. In the opening pages of Douglas Coupland's defining 1991 novel Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture, the three protagonists contemplate a barren Californian landscape—a "blank space at the end of a chapter." Having left behind promising corporate careers for low-wage jobs, they embody a generation suspended between fading postwar optimism and uncertain futures, shaped by economic precarity and detachment from an increasingly commercialized world. Drawing from the holdings of the Dakis Joannou Collection, Gen X: Tales from the Forgotten Generation brings together works by artists born between 1960 and 1980, the decades traditionally chosen as bookends for this generation. Outnumbered by the demographic dominance of baby boomers and millennials, this cohort grew up in the shadow of 1980s prosperity and the subsequent recessions. They became known as the "Forgotten Generation," a moniker that also reflects the lack of parental supervision common in dual-income households. Witnessing the transition from analog to digital culture, Generation X came of age just before computer technologies fully permeated everyday life. While the internet and cell phones began to spread in the 1990s, the mediascape of this generation was originally dominated by television, video, and cinema. The explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the Gulf War unfolded live on television, giving birth to the twenty-four-hour news cycle. On MTV, international audiences witnessed the infancy of reality shows while new music genres, like grunge and hip-hop, completely blurred the line between the underground and the mainstream. The artists in this exhibition responded to these seismic shifts with varying degrees of sincerity, irony, and even cynicism. Often described as the "slacker" generation, they combined lowbrow aesthetics, self-deprecation, and a healthy disregard for convention. Others explored the shifting borders of a new world order, capturing the early signals of a multicultural, globalized future. Debates around sexuality, gender, and the ongoing effects of the HIV/AIDS epidemic exerted a significant influence on the ways in which artists depicted bodies, birthing a disquieting army of decaying avatars, metallic cyborgs, and new mutant creatures. Identity politics emerged as a new battleground, while the media and fashion industries were analyzed, appropriated, and deconstructed in many of the works by this generational cohort. Some artists embraced the expansive reach of "relational aesthetics"—a term that, in the 1990s, came to describe new forms of artistic collaboration and social action practiced by many members of this generation—while others responded by turning inward with works that explored personal mythologies and private worlds of the imagination. Each in their own way, the artists in Gen X forged a distinct language in response to an ever-accelerating culture that threatened to leave them behind. Rather than fading into the past, their methods for navigating precarity and transition continue to resonate and can perhaps serve as inspiration as millennials, Gen Z, and Generation Alpha prepare to confront their own unforeseen futures. The show will be on view at the DESTE Foundation in Athens, starting on June 11th.

From
11 June 2026
Venue
DESTE Foundation for Contemporary Art
Address
Filellinon 11 & Em. Pappa Street, Neo Ionia
Hours
10:00–14:00 (during exhibitions only)