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News

»» Icelandic Artists at the Manifesta Biennial in Trentino
»» Ólafur Elíasson's Waterfalls in New York
»» Icelandic Art in the Heart of Chelsea, New York City

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Features

Shauna Laurel Jones:
Art Against Architecture
One of the most interesting exhibitions of the summer in Iceland was mounted at the National Gallery.

Jón Proppé:
Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir, a.k.a. Shoplifter
With a work in the windows of MoMA and a roster of upcoming exhibitions, Hrafnhildur is an artist to reckon with.

Shauna Laurel Jones:
Katrín Friðriksdóttir
Katrin explores how and why ecological and human risks are artificially created.

Icelanders at Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York
It's Not Your Fault

From June 28 to August 8 this summer the well-known New York gallery Luhring Augustine presented a remarkable exhibition of works by young Icelandic artists, curated by Icelandiers Markús Þór Andrésson and Ragnar Kjartansson. The title of the exhibition was It’s Not Your Fault. The exhibition was reviewed for the New York Times by critic Karen Rosenberg who described Ásdís Sif's work as "subtly unnerving". The following descriptions are taken from the gallery's press release:

A performance by Ásdís Sif Gunnarsdóttir (b. 1976) provides the title of the exhibition. She participated in an open mic comedy night where she addressed an anonymous member of the audience, offering the consolation: “It’s not your fault!” Together with a documentation of the performance, Gunnarsdóttir presents a new video installation where she sets forth performance as an abstract visual poetry. Brought up in the world of theater, Ragnar Kjartansson (b. 1976) creates layers of familiar references inspired by stage sets, show biz clichés, art historical genres and popular visual culture. His video installation, God, is an attempt to construct a moment of honesty while repeatedly singing the melancholic mantra, “Sorrow conquers happiness”, in the midst of pink chiffon draperies. He also displays a new series of paintings that capture the theatricality of the medium; it’s performative and prop-like nature. The practice of Ásmundur Ásmundsson (b. 1971) is also rooted in performance. In a sound piece he performs a medley of popular tunes, entering the uncomfortable zone of embarrassment which in recent years has been his site of research. In another work, a video, he sings to the audience with his “friends from the deep, deep blue”, evoking the torn relationship that Icelanders have with the mammals of the sea. Not altogether unfamiliar with humiliation, Magnús Sigurdarson (b. 1966) poses as a stranded alien on Miami Beach in the photo series, The Stranger, bringing to mind Camus’ novel through the filter of the indie-group, The Cure. In a dramatic vitrine display, Storm, Sigurdarson aspires to capture and display the Arctic Gene.

While some of the artists in the exhibition engage themselves directly in performance, others use staging and theatrical tools. The stage of the locally renowned club, “Hotel Iceland”, is the focal point in Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir’s (b. 1969) work Lonely where she exposes its dated gimmickry. Her Hairy Moon is a mysterious object that combines Wagnerian qualities with the disco ball. Unnar Örn (b. 1974), on the contrary, ignores myths and fantasy in his search for the origin of meaning, his interest lying instead in forgotten archives. Like an investigator considering the evidence of a crime, he presents a collection of information, such as trivial objects, that contest categorization in the Reykjanes Heritage Museum. With his roots in lyrical conceptualism, Haraldur Jónsson (b. 1961) is spot on in his research into the myth of Nordic melancholia. His landscape of Crumpled Darkness evokes a geological reading of the term“fault” in the exhibition’s title. He also displays Tunnel, an object of fantastic nature - two sandwiched mirrors create the longest and the shortest tunnel in the world. The Icelandic artists in the exhibition, It’s Not Your Fault, set the stage for a polyphony of stories, playing with the tropes of remoteness, gloom and distance often related to the island in the North, while considering the immediate proximity of their work to the viewer. A glacial landscape is trapped
in Katrín Sigurdardóttir’s (1967) large pedestal, only visible to the audience if they mount it and stick their head through a hole in the ground. Her minimal sculpture turns into a stage on which
the viewer is put on display.


LIST Icelandic Art News. Page last updated 13 August 2008. Texts and images copyright © 2008 by the authors. For inquiries and contact information see about us.

 

 

 

Ásdís Sif Gunnarsdóttir: Esjan, 2007. Video Installation

The exhibition featured art by Birgir Andrésson, Hrafnhildur Arnardóttir, Ásmundur Ásmundsson,Ásdís Sif Gunnarsdóttir, Unnar Örn, Haraldur Jónsson, Ragnar Kjartansson, Katrín Sigurdardóttir and Magnús Sigurdarson.

Curated by Markús Thór Andrésson in collaboration with Ragnar Kjartansson.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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