Description
Spanning painting, drawing, sculpture, and video, Zeta Tsermou’s work explores female experience — how desire and identity are shaped through sexuality, age, motherhood, social norms, and politics.
Through an intuitive process of cutting, collage, and juxtaposition, she reimagines the body in both its physical and metaphysical dimensions, exposing intimate details while forging new connections between them.
Fragmented yet ever-present, the body becomes both subject and vessel of her artistic inquiry.
Drawing from her personal history and cultural heritage, Tsermou transforms memory and emotion into a visual language of form and color, questioning familiar representations.
A sensual dialogue also emerges between the body and the natural world — where organic forms meet human presence, revealing layers of tenderness, resilience, and intimacy.
Through this lens, she opens a space of conversation between the organic, the human, and the spiritual, tracing subtle tensions and affinities that shape our inner landscapes.
Her background in architecture subtly informs this process, refining her sensitivity to space, structure, and form.
Navigating between control and instinct, order and flow, her compositions become more than images — they are environments for reflection, reclamation, and transformation.
Biography
Zeta Tsermou (born in Athens, 1972) is a visual artist based in Brussels, working across painting, sculpture, and video.
She holds an Integrated Master’s in Fine Arts with a specialization in sculpture from the Athens School of Fine Arts (2021), a Master’s in Architectural Design from the Bartlett School of Architecture (UCL, London) (1999), and a Degree in Architecture from the National Technical University of Athens (1998).
Tsermou has exhibited widely in Greece, Europe, and abroad, including Art Athina, the Hydra Museum, and La Centrale in Brussels.
In addition to her exhibitions, she has also taught workshops in sculpture and fine arts, contributing to contemporary artistic education and discourse.
Works