Lögberg-Heimskringla - 11.02.2005, Qupperneq 16

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 11.02.2005, Qupperneq 16
16 » Lögberg-Heimskringla» Friday 11 February 2005 She paints her family heritage Sharon Norman with one of her paintings at her home in Vancouver. On her trip to Iceland in 2000 she took a lot of photographs and used them to express her impression of Iceiand. She is working on her second exhibit in Iceland and hopes to take her paintings there next year. Steinþór Guðbjartsson Vancouver, BC Sharon Norman, a Cana- dian artist of Icelandic descent living and working in Vancou- ver, BC, is working on her sec- ond exhibit in Iceland. “I was looking at this year, but prob- ably it will not happen untii 2006,” she says. About 14 years ago, Sha- ron brought some of her paint- ings to Iceland for an exhibit. “I took some of my Canadian paintings so they could see what Canada was iike,” she says. When she got back she started painting some abstract works based on her experience in Iceland and had a show in Vancouver. “That was my im- pression of what Iceland was,” she recalls. In the summer of 2000, Sharon retumed to Iceland, took a lot of photographs, and has used them to do a series that she plans to take to Ice- iand. “The Icelandic paint- ings series is the beginning of an exploration into my fam- ily heritage,” she writes on her webpage, www.sharonnorman. com. “I have done this series of paintings to explain my vision of the country, the people and their sence of place.” Iceland and everything Icelandic has played a big role in Sharon’s live. She was born and raised in Winnipeg and has lived in Vancouver since 1973. “My father was very strong in the Icelandic community in Winnipeg and I grew up in it. Our house was always talking about Iceland and the roots.” Her patemal grandfather Albert Kristoffer Jónsson, later Sir Albert Christopher Johnson, was bom in Akureyri in 1867. About 20 years later he emi- grated to Winnipeg, Canada, and soon he entered the print- ing trade as an employee of the Icelandic weekly Lögberg. In 1893 he married Elizabeth Sigrid, the youngest daughter of Sigurður J. Jóhannesson, the owner of Lögberg, and his wife Guðrún Guðmundsdóttir. In 1924, “Berti” was ap- pointed the first Consul in Winnipeg for the Danish and Icelandic govemments and in 1937 the Danish Royal Court in Copenhagen bestowed on him the Knight’s Cross of the Royal Order of Dannebrog. Berti and Elizabeth had six children. One of them was Sharon’s father, Dr. Albert Valtýr, a dentist in Winnipeg. His wife and Sha- ron’s mother, Lillian Fimey, was the daughter of Ingibjörg Sigurdson who was married to an Englishman. Sharon had decided to take her paintings to Iceland last summer but had to de- lay her trips since the gallery in Réykjavík she was dealing with closed. “The paintings are ready,” she says, “and I’m look- ing forward to my next visit to Iceland.” WWII mystery solved? Roy Eric Peterson, son of Ethel and Lárus Peterson (bom Magnússon), lost two of his brothers during World War II. The remains of one of them have never been found. New knowledge may change that in the fall. World War II had a great influence on the Peterson fam- ily. Roy is the youngest of five boys. The three older boys, who all joined the Royal Ca- nadian Air Force, were bom in the 1920s and the other two in the 1930s. His brother Law- rence Herbert, flying officer, was killed during the Battle of E1 Alamein in North Africa in 1942. Another brother, flying officer Sidney Glen, served as an observer/navigator and was killed in action over Holland on May 25, 1944, 12 days be- fore D-Day. “Theoretically the plane crashed and the bodies were recovered and eventually bur- ied in Jonkerbos War Cem- etery in Holland,” Roy recalls. When he was 21 years old he went there and paid his re- spects. However, Sid’s body was never found. A few years ago it was stated that the plane had crashed-landed and the forward part, with the remains of five of seven of the crew, tipped over into a swampy area and went down. Further- more, an eyewitness said that parts of the plane kept coming up every year. A commemo- rative marker was erected in memory of the crew near the crash site on September 22, 2001. Roy leamed about it about two years ago when he was contacted by a Dutch founda- tion and told that if he wrote a letter to the mayor of the largest town in the area where the plane crashed, asking for an investigation on the crash, the town council had to react to it, under the Geneva Con- vention. He and some other family members of the crew responded with letters and the foundation worked very hard on the issue. They contacted PHOTO: STEINÞÓR GUÐBJARTSSON all 21 council members, and as it tumed out, the council asked for another letter. “I sent it and it arrived on the day of tlie council vote,” Roy says. “The vote came down to 10 against and 11 for.” In short, the plane will be recovered and Roy is looking at the fall. “The best time of the year to do it is in Septem- ber or October when the water table is at its lowest,” he says. Roy Eric Peterson is an editorial cartoonist for the Vancouver Sun. Upham reumon and centennial in July The Alumni Committee of Upham and Bantry Schools has set the dates of July 1 and 2, 2005 for their All School Reunion. This will be in con- junction with the Centennial of the City of Upham, ND. The committee invites all alumni and teachers, as well as any student or teacher who was part of any school within the Upham or Bantry School District, to the reunion. ^pYEOMAN ijy FARM Stefanía Sveinbjarnardóttír Ray Dignum . Partiam.ON K0H 2K0 Tel: 613.375.6308 E-mail: yeomanfa@frontenac.net www.yeoman-icelandic-sheep.ca Breeders of lcelandic Sheep Upham served a variety of communities. To the east, along the Mouse (Souris) River Valley, was the Icelan- dic settlement. Other groups in the are were Norwegians, Germans and German-Rus- sians. For more information on the Upham-Bantry All School Reunion and the Upham City Centennial 2005, visit http:// www.upham.kl2.nd.us. Krave’s Candy Co. 45 Durantl Road Wpg, MB R2J 3T1 I’HONE: (204) 654-1361 TOU. pREE: 1 (800) 357-6867 Larry Finnson Chris Emery Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca

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