Reykjavík Grapevine - 15.08.2014, Side 24

Reykjavík Grapevine - 15.08.2014, Side 24
24 The Reykjavík GrapevineIssue 12 — 2014 Art | Interview “Grýla” The general idea here was to paint Grýla the way she might have looked if she were a real person (as a vagrant, more or less). I thought it would make for a more interesting painting if I would show her hav- ing broken into a house, and eating a child right there and then. “Ragnheiður Jónsdóttir” This work is part of a series (that I never completed) of “cover paint- ings,” i.e. paintings based on other peoples’ paintings and images. The picture on the back of the 5,000 krónur bill served as the basis for this particular painting. I just thought it was a fascinating image—I especially like the headgear that the ladies are wearing. Þrándur On Some Of His Paintings need any additional information to see what’s happening, apart from the title, that’s something good.” Þrándur has found a lot of success in Iceland, despite still being in a relatively early stage of his artistic career. In the year 2008, he first became able to earn a living entirely from selling his art, which is quite an achievement for anyone—es- pecially during that economically tu- multuous era. The advent of the internet has also contributed to his success. For whatever reason, his painting of Grýla eating a baby in all her hag-ish glory surfaced on popular web-portal Red- dit—unbeknownst to Þrándur—where it received a lot of attention from all over the world, leading to even more acclaim at home. “It seems to be a pattern in Ice- land, whenever people in other coun- tries notice something that an Icelander has done, only then do other Icelanders start paying attention.” Þrándur’s paintings could be con- strued as illustrations in the vein of the Old Masters’ paintings. Rarely did art- ists like Leonardo or Titan or Van Eyck create because they were uniquely in- spired to. They painted the things they did because their viewer was already fa- miliar with the subject, most of them be- ing commissions. When viewed in this light, Þrándur’s work assumes a purpose akin to that of the stained glass windows of yore, used in churches and cathe- drals to tell the illiterate masses what the hell the guy at the front was saying in Latin. These windows and paintings were there to illustrate a story that the audience already knew and could recog- nize, usually of a religious or historical nature. The major difference with Þrán- dur’s work, then, is that he’s not being commissioned, and that he does choose stories and themes because he feels in- spired by them. In this sense, the crux of his work is that he sticks to what others are already familiar with, instead of in- venting his own stories. He’s not necessarily looking to edu- cate the viewer on his subjects, though. Even if not everyone is familiar with the Icelandic Census of 1703, for example, it doesn’t matter to Þrándur as long as he’s succeeded in making a compelling im- age. “I’m just happy to paint and make a living from it, that’s my main goal. It’s not often that I feel like, ‘Oh this, I must tell people this, I must convey this in a painting.’ That’s not usually how I go about it. You know every now and then, I feel like I want to. But then again, if I have a message that I feel strongly about getting across, usually I think painting is not the right medium to do so.” When asked what he thinks of the sentiment that painting is dead, as is sometimes declared by those who credit the invention of photography with kill- ing it, Þrándur responds that’s simply not true. “I think painting is a very pow- erful medium; you can do a lot of things that photography can’t. And that’s just almost like saying that, you know, mov- ies are dead after the advent of computer games, you know... whatever.” It has its limitations like any medium does, but it also has its unique strengths. “Painting has been declared dead so many times and always when people think it is, it has a comeback and be- comes very fashionable again, and the really big collectors, like Saatchi and those people, all of the sudden they start buying very expensive paintings.” It’s unoriginal to even declare the death of painting anymore, he says, since the sentiment’s been proven wrong over and over again. However, the issue of money in art is a contentious one. Some argue that it has no place in true art, where others argue that art is a commodity like anything else. Þrándur says, “If no one is buying it, if no one can make a living from it, then it automatically gets re- duced to a hobby thing.” Dropping out Þrándur’s education in art has been un- traditional, or traditional, depending on how you look at it. He attended Lis- taháskóli Íslands, the Iceland Academy of the Arts, for a year before dropping out. He says: “it wasn’t that much a dis- agreement, but rather because it was the Old Masterly painting styles that I want- ed, and there wasn’t really any place for that in the school. So I just figured I might as well drop out. Nevertheless, I had a good time in school. The social life and the atmosphere were fine, but I wasn’t really learning what I wanted to.” He also says that “they emphasized concept quite a lot there, and I wasn’t comfortable doing that.” Indeed, it’s clear that to him, tech- nique is more important, though maybe not overwhelmingly so. As he says, “how you arrange it and how you do it is the same as with a movie. Of course, the script is very important, but if you have a lousy director, it’s never going to amount to anything. A very good director could make a great movie out of a lousy script. I think how you make a painting—the formal parts—is more important than the idea behind it, or the motifs. You can have the best motif or idea in the world, but if you haven’t got the skills or the ability to really get it across, then it won’t do you much good.” Within the art education system Þrándur thinks that students should have a choice and not be forced one way or the other. “I don’t believe that one should sort of come at the cost of the other. I think that everything should be two different schools. So there should be two different departments or something like that within a school. I think there should be a chance, there should be op- portunity for people who want to study technique to do so.” Discussing Iceland’s art academy in particular, he says, “it sort of domi- nates the whole thing. It’s pretty much the only serious art school. I know a lot of people who went in there, young peo- ple that are good draftsmen and enjoy drawing and painting and sort of come out of the school having left all that be- hind. I’ve seen it quite a few times. And it’s a bit of a shame. If the talents go to waste. But then again, perhaps one can’t blame the art school because, I mean, it’s true that that isn’t what is sort of rel- evant today, the big thing. Nevertheless, I always think it’s a shame when people are discouraged from doing what they really enjoy.” The myth, the man, the legend Þrándur had a choice: assimilate or leave. And so, in 2003, he left. He worked on his own for a while before running into celebrated Norwe- gian painter Odd Nerdrum, the face of the Kitsch Move- ment, on the street in Reykjavík one day. As he tells it: “I was walking down Laugavegur with a few friends, when I saw him. They sort of dared me into ap- proaching him, so I chased him into Mál og menning [book- store]. And he was taken aback that I spoke Norwegian, he thought I was a journalist or something. I told him that I was Icelandic and living here, and he said, ‘Oh yeah, come by the house tomor- row.’ And I did and we spoke a bit, and that’s how it start- ed.” For the next three years or so, Þrándur joined Odd’s infor- mal school of paint- ing. Odd wasn’t a teacher and no one was taking classes, it was more of a mentorship where everyone painted together in his house, the old Reykjavík Library. The best way “After he started painting with Odd, people would frequently ask him if he was going to paint his erect penis, too.” Art is a loaded term, encompass- ing just about everything, from a performance about just sitting around in MoMA for a really long time, to documenting the smash- ing of an ancient Chinese vase, to wrapping up buildings and bridges around the world, to making a giant chrome balloon animal sculpture. There was once a time where the only accepted form of art (in West- ern Europe, at least) was realism, both painted and sculpted, as in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seven- teenth century span during which the Renaissance and all its pre- and post- movements were in full swing. Get Real

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