Reykjavík Grapevine - 20.05.2016, Blaðsíða 38

Reykjavík Grapevine - 20.05.2016, Blaðsíða 38
The Reykjavík Grapevine Reykjavík Arts Festival 38 One of the most intriguing events in the 2016 Reykjavík Arts Festival pro- gramme is an interactive performance by the Wunderland group. Entitled “Phoenix,” the event is the third of its kind, and promises an immersive ex- perience as participants take a guided walk along Reykjavík’s harbour, en- countering performers and specially created environments. We caught up with Gunnar and Mette, two of the peo- ple behind the event, to find out more. Phoenix seems like an interesting cross-breed of interactive experience, theatre, installation and performance. How does it touch on these different areas? Phoenix plays with all your senses. Each guest goes through their own personal adventure, alone, meeting and interacting with performers in some places, and listening to sounds and words in others. They wander through an urban landscape of desert- ed cars, boats, a tent and a structure made of things found at the harbour. You could call it an interactive, sen- sory performance; but you could call it a concert walk, poetry walk or a living installation, too. Reykjavík, and Iceland generally, are quite immersive environments. Does it help to have this kind of canvas on which to create a piece like this? Definitely. Phoenix adapts to its sur- rounding and changes accordingly. So the nature and the location of Snarfar- ahöfn harbour—the urban landscape, the boat community, the industrial background and impressive view to the mountains all shaped the performance. Do you train your mind to notice things differently when designing such a piece? Yes, I would say so. Phoenix is made by artists working in the Denmark-based performing arts initiator, Wunder- land. It was founded by Mette Aakjær, who has a background in physical the- atre and dance. Mette shaped the basic idea and concept for the performance, and from that foundation, the art- work is shaped by a collective process. All the artists invited are trained to heighten their awareness of reality— many have movement training, and all have a very sensory approach. What are some of the memorable sensory experiences that became key to this edition of Phoenix? Speaking for just a few of us, key sen- sory experiences were: the sound of the birds and the long, dry grass, blending with the sound of the machines of the industrial harbour and the wind from the mountains. The boats on land, looking like they’re floating over the ground, or perhaps longing for the sea. The strong sense of a community. How many people will be able to pass through this work in the time it's in Reykjavík? If all time slots are filled, there are about 300 that can take the journey. People enter one at a time, every eight minutes, and each individual journey is around 90 minutes. Do you have a message for someone who might be considering signing up to experience Phoenix? During the past three editions, the guests have spread the word to their friends, until the last days have always been sold out. So our best advice is to book early. Book your spot at midi.is. The Known Unknown Wunderland invite you to step into a strange but familiar world. Words by JOHN ROGERS Gerður Kristný Guðjónsdóttir, usually known more simply as Gerður Kristný, is one of Iceland’s most notable poets, well-known both at home and abroad. She represented Iceland at the Poetry Olympics in London in 2012 and was selected as writer-in-residence at the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa. Although she has authored nine- teen books of poetry, fiction, and children’s writing, she is perhaps best known as a poet due to her 2010 book ‘Blóðhófnir’. It won the Icelan- dic Literary Prize, was nominated for the Nordic Literature Prize, and was published in English as ‘Bloodhoof’ in 2012 by Old Norse scholar and Ice- landic translator Rory McTurk. If only one poet was being included as a major part in the Reykjavík Arts Festival, it’s no surprise that it should be her. The giantess speaks Umbra Ensemble will debut a perfor- mance adapted from ‘Bloodhoof’ at the Reykjavík Arts Festival, with music composed by Kristín Þóra Haraldsdót- tir and movement choreographed by Saga Sigurðardóttir. The poem is a re- evaluation of an Old Norse poem from the Edda, in which the giantess (and author’s namesake) Gerður is abduct- ed and forced to marry the god Freyr. The original poem, “Skírnismál,” is framed around the journey of the ser- vant who fetches the woman, while this contemporary retelling is from Gerður’s perspective. Because the stanzas in the original Eddic poems are divided into speaking parts between the characters, some medieval scholars believe they were originally performed dramatically rather than simply read aloud. This creates an interesting precedent for this new staging. In one sense, it will be the newest edition in a sequence of creative reinterpretations of the origi- nal poem, but in another sense it will be closer to its original form than the preserved “Skírnismál” itself. Poetic Olympians If you’d like your kids to have a shot at the Poetry Olympics or the Iowa Writ- ers Workshop, you’re in luck. Gerður will be conducting two creative writ- ing workshops for kids ages 9-14, cen- tered around ‘The Weather Diaries’, the current art installation by Cooper & Gorfer at the Nordic House. The ex- hibit itself is also a reimagining of the shared culture and geography of Ice- land, Greenland, and the Faroes. This hypnotic and fantastical atmosphere, and its emphasis on reimagining, is the creative jumping-off point for the children’s writing. Register your little ones for the work- shops on the 28th and 29th of May on the Nordic House's website. And don’t miss the only performance of ‘Bloodhoof’ on June 1st—tickets are still available through Midi.is. Giants And Children Gerður Kristný at the Reykjavík Arts Festival Words by GRAYSON DEL FARO
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