Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 124

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2004, Side 124
Gavin Lucas But how is the authority of such images created? Tell two different people to draw a section or an artefact, and you will get two different images; of this much, most fíeld archaeologists are no doubt aware. But the real issue is whether such differences can simply be reduced to technical efficiency, experience or skill. For if not, then we must face the question that different ways of seeing the archaeology will produce different archaeological images. That in fact, terms such as accuracy, objectivity or clarity, when used to assess archaeologi- cal imagery are not absolute or solid cri- teria, but constructed. Moreover, in this light, the deployment of convention - especially to excess - only serves, ironi- cally to mask the constructed nature of these criteria, by offering a uniformity to the visual archive which impacts back upon our conception of the archaeologi- cal record. The question at stake here, is the extent to which archaeological imagery constructs the archaeological record and as a corollorary, constitutes the nature of archaeological practice. It is such a question that I want to explore here through an examination of the visu- al archive in Icelandic archaeology since the late 19th century. Archaeological Illustration and Photography in Iceland As in most European countries, archaeol- ogy began in Iceland in the mid 19th cen- tury, and by the tum of the century, had become more or less professionalized - though the number of archaeologists was small, usually only one major figure in any generation (Friðriksson 1994: 8). Peculiar to Iceland was a strong connec- tion between archaeology and a rich liter- ary tradition, specifically the Sagas, which influenced the whole nature of archaeological investigation, even until quite recently (ibid.). Less unique, was the association between archaeology and the development of nationalism. As in most European countries, archaeology in Iceland was closely entwined with nationalistic sentiment and through its focus on the Golden Age of the Settlement period - i.e. the Viking settle- ment remains, archaeology helped to cre- ate a sense of national identity against the recent history of Danish colonialism. This broad social and political context has undoubtedly determined the over-rid- ing emphasis given to Viking archaeolo- gy in the country, a situation which per- sists to this day, especially in the eyes of the wider international community, though this is now slowly changing. One might explore how the production of popular imagery of this Viking past drew on Icelandic archaeology, but that is not my concern here. Rather, I want to specifically focus on the relationship between technical illustration and inter- pretation. Generally archaeologists produced their own images, and given the few pro- fessional archaeologists working in Iceland - at least until the 1980s, the his- tory and development of archaeological illustration in the country is inextricably linked to individuals and their styles. Sigurður Vigfusson, Brynjúlfur Jónsson, Þorsteinn Erlingsson, Daniel Bmun, 122
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