Reykjavík Grapevine - 03.02.2012, Blaðsíða 25

Reykjavík Grapevine - 03.02.2012, Blaðsíða 25
25 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 2 — 2012 Art | Photography Frontiers of Another Nature Celina Lunsford came to Iceland last month for the release of the book ‘Frontiers of Another Nature: Pictures from Iceland’ (‘Ný nát- túra: Myndir frá íslandi’). The book is the latest release from Crymo- gea, and published on the occa- sion of the arts and culture pro- gramme “Fabulous Iceland—Guest of Honour of the Frankfurt book Fair 2011”; accompanying the exhi- bition ‘Frontiers of Another Nature – Contemporary Photographic Art from Iceland’ which was shown at Fotografie Forum Frankfurt from August 19—October 16, 2011. Ce- lina Lunsford is the artistic director of Fotografie Forum Frankfurt, and photographic editor of the book. The title of the book is borrowed from the first photography book from Ice- land. This is not another monograph, rather a dialogue between contempo- rary and historical photographs show- ing traces of man’s interventions and interaction with the expansive land- scape of Iceland. The book is a selec- tion of fifty Icelandic photographers spanning the first 150 years of pho- tography. The book is sequenced like beat poetry, with the historical records playfully juxtaposed with contemporary photography. Topography took prece- dence over the artist biography in the selection process. Celina wanted con- tent that would sustain ongoing inter- est. Photographs were rigorously culled from the collections of the National Museum and the Reykjavík Museum of Photography resulting in an amaz- ing survey that creates a visual narra- tive around a vast landscape, or loss thereof. I had the opportunity to speak with Celina after the lecture. We both origi- nate from similar parts of rural America and spoke about the decline of the na- tive landscape. Both being expatriates for over a decade, our witness to the rapid acceleration of this process is not skewed by the creeping normalcy that blinds a local populous. With each visit to our homeland, the suburban sprawl of ubiquitous concrete blocks seems more epidemic, nearly beyond the point of recognition. I ask, do you remember back in early Hanna-Barbera cartoons when animators repeated the same background over and over during a travelling scene in order to save time? Tom chased Jerry through a house that seemed to go on forever with the same coffee table, vase, window, door every three seconds. America is beginning to look like this to me. I can no longer rely on my vision to gauge location when driving past Walmart, Starbucks, Mc- Donalds, Walmart. Why Iceland? I visited Iceland for four days in 2006. I briefly studied geology, and was fascinated by the landscape. Iceland seemed to be set back in time, and that was a beautiful thing. It reminds me of what we lost not so long ago. Is there a relationship be- tween conservationism and land- scape photography? It is not an old idea. Of course, Ansel Adams made us aware of the beauty of our surroundings, but learning to re- spect our environment is a rather new concept. What does the future hold for the next 150 years of landscape pho- tography? Up until now it has been a reflection on preciousness. Perhaps landscape is viewed in a symbolic sense, with a fo- cus on detail in the future. Our choice of lens will certainly be- come more narrow as the natural landscape diminishes. Words Ryan Parteka Photo Hvalreki

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