8 May – 6 June 2026
Yeti
The Greatest Nation Ever
Opening in the presence of the artist
Friday, 8 May 2026
18:30 – 20:30

The Edit Gallery presents The Greatest Nation Ever, the first solo exhibition by Yeti at the gallery. The works unfold imagined worlds shaped by power, belief, and perception, unstable and shifting, much like the reality they echo.
The title functions as a double gesture. It borrows the language of political supremacy while turning inward, toward human imagination itself: fluid, surreal, and resistant to control. Here, the idea of a “nation” is not fixed territory, but a mental construct, formed through memory, perception, and belief.
Working intuitively and without preparatory sketches, Yeti draws on reverse perspective from Byzantine iconography to construct compositions that hold multiple viewpoints at once. Figures, animals, and fragments of landscape move between the symbolic and the familiar, creating images that feel at once immediate and elusive. References to mythology, history, science, and religion surface and dissolve without settling into a single narrative, allowing meaning to remain open.
Selected Artworks

Fearless and Carefree, 2026
oil, wood, plastic, and taxidermy thrush on canvas
62 x 68 cm

(Left) Divine Sign, 2025 (right) Divine Sign II, 2025
oil on canvas (right) oil and metal on canvas
40 x 30 cm (right) 42 x 30 cm

Jester is Dead, 2024
oil and spray paint on canvas
150 x 100 cm

Fucking Ell, 2025
oil and spray paint on canvas
100 x 120 cm

Gift, 2025
oil on canvas
47 x 37 cm

Dogs Heart, 2025
oil and spray on canvas
120 x 100 cm

Untitled, 2025
oil on canvas
120 x 100 cm

Theater of the Absurd, 2025
oil on canvas
200 x 140 cm

Taming Monster, 2026
oil on canvas
120 x 100 cm

Another Divine Sign, 2026
oil and wood on canvas
25.5 x 35 cm
Artist
Yeti
Yeti (b. 1996) is a multidisciplinary artist living and working between Cyprus and Greece. He studied at the Athens School of Fine Arts and spent a semester at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw. Beginning with graffiti, his practice has expanded across painting, murals, sculpture, and installation. Working primarily with oil and spray paint, he creates layered compositions that merge street aesthetics with symbolic and art-historical references. His work explores themes of life, death, and transformation, drawing on philosophy, religion, and Jungian archetypes to construct surreal, emotionally charged images. Working under the pseudonym “Yeti,” he maintains a deliberate distance between his personal identity and his artistic practice.