Reykjavík Grapevine - 09.10.2015, Qupperneq 44
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HISTORIC EXHIBITION RESTAURANT • SHOP • ACTIVITIES
The Saga Museum brings the Viking age to life. There you’ll walk
among some of Iceland’s most famous heroes and infamous villains
portrayed in their defining moments; the Viking settlement in 874,
Leif the Lucky’s discovery of America, the founding of the world’s
first parliament and the epic clan feuds that marked the settlement.
This is as close as you’ll ever get to meeting Vikings in the flesh.
Saga Museum • Grandagarður 2 • 101 Reykjavík
Tel.: (+354) 511 1517 • Open: Daily from 10 to 18
www.sagamuseum.is
Try on the clothes and
weapons of the Viking
age. Great fun and a
great photo opportunity.
The shop has a wide
selection of traditional
Viking handiwork,
souvenirs and clothing.
ART
ONGOING
from multiple generations of artistic
methods and points of view.
Runs until October 25
Harbinger
‘Venslakerfi’ by Eygló Harðardóttir
An exhibition of Eygló’s multidimensional
art, layered paintings and sculptures,
which question the human experience and
emphasise the possible rather than the
concrete.
Runs until October 31
Harpa
‘The Iceland Expo Pavilion’
Fifteen-minute films produced by Sagafilm
will be projected on the walls and ceiling
of the Expo Pavilion from 10:00 to 18:00.
Visitors can then be immersed in these
films, which feature scenes of Icelandic
nature.
Runs until December 31
Hornið
‘Take Two’ by Jóhann Vilhjálmsson
Part artist, part musician, and part chef,
Jóhann is a true jack-of-all-trades. His
mediums are pastels and ink, and he
gravitates towards bold, bright colours. His
subjects range from people, to landscapes,
scenes and more, but all have a surrealist
quality in common.
On permanent view
i8 Gallery
‘Works from 1971 – 1989’ by
Kristján Guðmundsson
i8 presents early works by visual artist
Kristján Guðmundsson. Kristján works with
two and three dimensional forms made
with graphite, and their relationship with
time, and space—to question and expand
the limits of illustration into the realm of
sculpture.
Runs until October 25
The Icelandic Phallological
Museum
The museum contains a collection of
more than 215 penises and penile parts
belonging to almost all the land and sea
mammals that can be found in Iceland.
There’s also a penis sculpture honouring
the Icelandic men's handball team.
On permanent view
Icelandic Printmakers
Association
‘Before Iceland: Multiple Plate
Drypoint Monotypes’ by Lorraine
Tady
Utilising the printmaking technique of
chine-collé on copper plates, Lorraine
Tady’s 35 prints are a mixture of
architectural mapping and divisions of
space.
Runs until October 18
Kópavogur Art Museum
Gerðarsafn
‘New Release’ by various artists
‘New Release’ is an exhibition of answers
to the question “Where does music
come from?” provided by a multitude of
international and Icelandic artists, and
curated by Nadim Samman.
Runs until October 11
Kringlan City Library ‘Dear Guðrún’
To celebrate Guðrún Helgadóttir’s 80th
birthday, the city library will host an exhibit
of her books, complete with illustrations
and art inspired by them.
Runs until November 30
'Ráðherraspilið’ by Hallgrímur
Helgason
In honour of the centennial anniversary of
women's suffrage, Hallgrímur Helgason
has created a game of ministers, where
players roll dice to form a government.
Whoever wins the women's majority vote
wins. Hallgrímur's work emphasises the
precarious relation between women and
power.
Runs until October 25
Living Art Museum
‘Art / Work’ by Emil Magnúsarson
Borhammar
On a daily basis, Emil finds himself reflecting
on his position in society’s hierarchies, and
the world in which he finds himself. He then
transforms these reflections into his artwork,
using a variety of materials, mostly text and
film.
Runs until November 15
Mokka-Kaffi
‘MIXED BAG’, by Höskuldur Harri
Gylfasob
Höskuldur is exhibiting new works at
Mokka-Kafi, featuring blends of colour and
imagery, hybrid art created with a mixture of
coloured inks, coating colours and glue.
Runs until November 4
Museum of Design and Applied
Art
‘Keepers’
This exhibit focuses on the collections in
the Museum of Design and Applied Art,
displaying a few key pieces, and explores
how and why the museum curates the works
that it does. The title refers both to the
objects themselves, the ones worth keeping,
as well as the people who preserved them,
kept them, and eventually gave them to the
museum for safekeeping.
Runs until June 10
The National Gallery
‘From the Rustic to the Selfie’
The National Gallery contains about 1,000
portraits by both Icelandic and foreign
artists—some modern, some centuries old.
This exhibition features selected portraits
from the gallery and asks viewers to
contemplate the human image from both
historical and personal perspectives.
Runs until October 31
‘Jacqueline with a Yellow Ribbon’ by
Pablo Picasso
Picasso’s widow, Jacqueline Roque
Picasso, has given her portrait as a gift
to the President of Iceland. This portrait
is considered to be one of Picasso’s
most unusual, and is highly sought after
worldwide.
Runs until January 4
‘Poetcast’ by Nína Tryggvadóttir
An influential Icelandic artist of her
generation, Nína Tryggvadóttir is credited
with bringing the aesthetics and ideologies
of abstract expressionism from mainland
Europe and the States to the then colonial
settlement of Iceland. This retrospective
exhibition will show works from her 1938-
1967 creative period.
Runs until December 31
Vasulka Chamber
Steina and Woody Vasulka are some of the
pioneers of multimedia and video art, and
have a show at the National Gallery. They
began experimenting with electronic sound,
stroboscopic light, and video in the late ‘60s,
and haven’t stopped since. The chamber’s
purpose is not only to present art from the
genre, but to encourage preserving and
mediating such works.
On permanent view
The National Museum of Iceland
‘A Woman’s Place’
This exhibition takes a look into the lives of
women from 1915 to 2015 and questions
the role women have had and currently have
in Icelandic society.
Runs until December 31
Bible Exhibit
This is an exhibit celebrating the 200 year
anniversary of the Icelandic Bible company
(Biblíufélagið). On display are many antique
Bibles owned by the National Museum and
the company itself.
Runs until December 31
‘Bundled Up In Blue’
This exhibition is centred around new
archeological findings from bones believed
to belong to a woman from the settlement
era, discovered in 1938 in East Iceland. New
research provides answers as to the age of
the woman in question, where she came
from, together with indications of what she
may have looked like and how she would
have dressed.
Runs until December 31
16
The Reykjavík Grapevine
Issue 16 — 2015
Drink Me 'Looking in - Sculptures and Models'
by Katrín Sigurðardóttir
Katrín Sigurðardóttir is one of Iceland's most successful and
well-known contemporary artists. Her works often play on scale,
shrinking down buildings, rooms or landscapes to trick the eye
and befuddle the mind, and transplanting or splicing locations in
unexpected ways. Katrín represented Iceland at the 55th Venice
Biennale, and has shown at The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
The Sculpture Centre and PS1 in her adopted hometown of New
York City. For the remainder of 2015, a range of sculptures and
maquettes made between 2004-2014 are on display at Hafnar-
húsið, showing Katrín's creative process from conception through
to large-scale finished installation. JR
Reykjavík Art Museum: Hafnarhús
Tryggvagata 17 (D3) | Oct 3 - Dec 31 | Admission: 1,400 ISK