Reykjavík Grapevine - 25.09.2015, Side 6

Reykjavík Grapevine - 25.09.2015, Side 6
6 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 1 — 2011 Compare Prices and Read Reviews on Tripadvisor www.bustravel.is Tel: +354 511 2600 · info@bustravel.is · bustravel.is Exciting Day Tours – Beautiful Places – “Excellent tour of Golden Circle, Reykjavik.” Collected and returned to cruise ship. Excellent trip and would definitely recommend. The price was approx. one-third of the cruise excursion.No problems with booking over the internet. Fantastic. Visited May 2015 Reykjavík’s City Hall currently hosts a large exhibit celebrating the hundred year anniver- sary of women's right to vote in Iceland. This exhibit includes a feminist art show, ‘Kynleikar’ (“Gender- play”) by fourteen young artists, curated by a downtown gallery called Ekkisens. Some of the works of art were put on dis- play in the staff cafeteria, where they put a few people off their lunch. The bourgeoisie cannot stomach the power of revolutionary art! In this particular case, the art given pride of place where people went to have lunch included video art which cut to- gether scenes from pornography with non-pornographic material. Few people want to mix sausage munching with eat- ing lunch. Though, to be exact, the porn scenes in question depicted people get- ting sperm on their face. If you want a picture of the fu- ture, imagine a dick ejaculating on a human face—forever. One might contend, that one point the artists might have wanted to make is that humans are confronted with pornog- raphy in their daily lives, whether they like it or not. And the people working in City Hall did not like being confronted with pornography. So they turned off the video installations. If that had been the end of the story, it would not have been news. However, since this was City Hall, it became a political issue. Politicians and pornography. Now there's a thought to put me off my lunch. The media storm began properly when Sveinbjörg Birna Sveinbjörnsdóttir, who sits on City Council for the populist Progressive Party, took to Facebook to complain that the offensive art exhibit had cost the City of Reykjavík fifty-two thousand Euros. In fact, the total cost for the city was around two hundred Euros. She quickly removed that Facebook post. I was going to say something about “egg on face” but suddenly that's not very appetizing. What she perhaps should have been shocked by is that fourteen artists can exhibit in City Hall without getting paid. It is odd to have to say that the City of Reykjavík should not be exploiting young artists. To add insult to injury, the city has not done anything to safeguard the works of art. According to a report in the newspaper DV, there is suspicion that the most controversial work has been sabotaged. Hopefully not by... you know. By... uh... you know. Spooge. The DVD containing the video piece was scratched beyond repair. Thank- fully, other copies exist. However, parts of another less controversial work were torn down. The word “píka” (that means “vagina”) was written on pieces of paper and plastered on the wall around the en- trance of an elevator and inside it. Some of the papers were torn down. Despite the obvious need, the remaining works will not get more protection, according to Halldór Auðar Svansson, city council- lor for the Pirate Party and member of the majority coalition. Don't be such a downer. Why focus on the two damaged works of art when twelve remain unsabotaged? To add insult to the insult that was origi- nally added to the injury, City Hall has no staff to take care of the art it is exhib- iting. The artists have said on Facebook that they have had to go in person to City Hall to turn the works of art on and off. Which could only be excused if no one in City Hall knows how to use a DVD player. That might explain how the DVD got damaged. In an interview with DV, visual artist Ás- dís Spanó said: “[In Iceland] it is usually not assumed that visual artists get paid for the exhibition of their works.” She is working with The Association of Visual Artists in Iceland to change that. That no one in City Hall gave any thought to paying these fourteen young artists for their work is sadly not an exception. It is one thing when a non-profit arts orga- nization or a small museum asks people to work for free, but another when a city with a budget of almost six hundred mil- lion Euros does it. If those fourteen young artists don't just quit art now and enrol in a stockbroking school, they should be given medals. Medals made out of bundles of cash, preferably. If it is any consolation, and it probably is not, they have joined a pan- theon of great artists whose art has been vandalized, from Rothko to Da Vinci to Picasso. Their works were repaired, of course. Which is what you do when an artwork in your care is damaged. Which City Hall has, as of this writing, not an- nounced it will do. I guess the artists should feel lucky their works have not been turned into urinals, like reverse Duchamps. So What's This “Controversial” Art In City Hall I Keep Hearing About? Art | Pearl clutching I C E L A N D 4 D U M M I E S Words by Kári Tulinius Illustration by Lóa Hjálmtýsdóttir 6 Th Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 15 — 2015 Things have taken a turn for the better where Iceland’s acceptance of Syrian refugees is concerned. The Icelandic government voted in fa- vour of offering 2 billion ISK in assis- tance to go towards welcoming the refugees brought to Iceland, assist- ing refugee relief efforts overseas, and speeding up the asylum seeker application process. At the same time, at least 100 Syrian refugees will be welcomed to Iceland, probably this December, and that may be the first group of many more. Akureyri has already been slated as the first town to welcome these refugees. Not the 1,600 or even the 500 refugees we’ve seen proposed, but it’s a start! In less heartening news, copy- right holder organisations and Ice- land’s major ISPs have reached an agreement to block their customers’ access to the Icelandic-language torrent site Deildu.net, and The Pirate Bay. The Pirate Party has come out strong against the move, with MP Ásta Guðrún Helgadóttir warning that it “set[s] a precedent for blocking access to websites without taking the matter to trial first and proving [the torrent sites] have hurt anyone.” As things such as proxy servers and other torrent sites re- main in existance, it is uncertain how effective the firewall will be. There’ve been a lot of predictions that upwards of 1.5 million tourists will visit Iceland next year, which is like five times the population of the country(!). In response, Minister for the Environment Sigrún Magnús- dóttir has confirmed that the gov- ernment is considering arrival tolls, increased parking fees, and other tolls in order to help maintain sites of natural wonder facing this much foot traffic. Given how unsuccessful the notorious Nature Pass idea was, we may just have to go ahead and pave over Geysir now. By Paul Fontaine NEWS IN BRIEF Continues Over...

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