Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Side 76

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Side 76
58 TÍMARIT ÞJÓÐRÆKNISFÉLAGS ISLENDINGA number of angels found in his works. We might mention “The Angel of Life” (1910-1911), “The Angel of Light” (same year, a painting, “The Guardian Angel” (1910-1947), and “Jacob Wrestling with the Angel.” Since faith in Christ was the foun- dation of Jónsson’s philosophy of life, it is natural that Christ should also figure prominently in his works. The Christ motif, apparently, occurs first in a painting entitled “The Hour of Death” (1908-1915) and in the statue “The First Settler in Iceland (an Irish Monk)” (1908- 1917) and recurs again and again after that, culminating in 1946 with a head of Christ and a ten-foot statue of Christ and in 1950 with a relief entitled “Come unto Me.” The last named, which appears to have been begun in 1917 as an ela- boration on an earlier painting (1913- 1915), is an eloquent expression of the artist’s belief that Christ is the center of our existence—the goal toward which all life is tending. Judging by the time of the ap- pearance of the angel and the Christ motifs, it may be added in this connection, Jónsson’s return to religion would seem to have taken place in about 1908. The themes of the victory of good over evil and of the upward surge of the human spirit, however, appear earlier in two of the works mentioned above —“Dawn” and “The Wave of the Ages,” respectively. Perhaps the artist conceived these works before his skeptical period. Or it may be that, because they “served life,” they were spared the destruction which later befell those of the works of that period which reflected the artist’s spiritual uncertainty.18 It has not been my purpose to suggest that all of Jónsson’s pictures contain some religious or philoso- phical idea. I have stressed the religious and philosophical side, however, because I feel it is almost certainly the single most important aspect of his art—and more so in his later works; for a study of his works in chronological order re- veals an increasing preoccupation with religious and philosophical questions with the passing years. His fondness for symbolism no doubt derives from his theory that life and existence are one great metaphor reflecting spiritual truths, some of which he wished to express in his art; therefore at least a nod- ding acquaintance with his religious and philosophical views is indis- pensable to any attempt at under- standing the symbolism in a large part of his works. It goes with- out saying that much has been left unsaid here on this score, but I hope, nevertheless, that what little has been said will provide a background for divining the meanings behind at least a few of Jónsson’s works. It is tempting to conclude with a tentative interpretation of what probably was Jónsson’s last work, left unfinished the year before his death, namely the relief “Draumur og dagsverk” (Aspiration and A- chievement; literally, “A Dream and a Day’s Work,” 1953). It pictures an angel standing over a snail which is striving upwards. I take this to be Jónsson’s final summing up of his attitude toward his artistic 18. Skodanir, p. 90.
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