Lögberg-Heimskringla - 10.03.2006, Síða 8

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 10.03.2006, Síða 8
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca David Jón Fuller Einar and Rosalind Vigfus-son have both made great contributions to the Ice- landic culture in North America, and now they’re getting ready to do it again. Readers of L-H will re- member that Einar has become known for his wood sculptures of wild birds, and that he has shown his work in Iceland. As for Rosalind, she was the orga- nizer of the New Iceland Youth Choir, which she orchestrated and wrote music for, and which toured Iceland to wide accalim in 2003. Now, as all of the origi- nal members have grown older, she is putting together a “New” New Iceland Youth Choir. The origin of the fi rst choir was in 1999, when Iceland’s young adult choir, Gradualekór from Langholtskirkja, per- formed in North America. Ro- salind and Einar’s son Kris, who was 13 at the time, was taken with their music and remarked, “If we lived in Iceland, I could be in a choir like that.” Rosa- lind took his words to heart, and began putting together a youth choir that autumn. Their fi rst performance was at the Arborg þorrablót in 2000. Rosalind, whose fi rst lan- guage was Icelandic and who still speaks it fl uently, taught the young singers the songs in Ice- landic, using a phonetic-English spelling she devised. “By the time we went to Iceland with the choir, they didn’t require this phonteic stuff any more,” she says. “They preferred to just read the [original] Icelandic text.” Of the music they performed, some were traditional Icelandic songs, and around six or seven were pieces that Rosalind com- posed, using Icelandic poems such as Böðvar Jakobson’s “Minni Íslands.” Now that the original mem- bers have grown up, a new crop of aspiring singers is fi lling the ranks, forming a completely new choir. “I was amazed at the in- terest that was out there still. So we are now 21 members, and we may have a couple more join up, and everyone is welcome,” says Rosalind. “Right now the oldest ones are 13 years old. It’s a much, much younger choir. We have members from Gimli, Riverton and Arborg, which is a nice rep- resentation of the area, and one young man from Hecla.” Rosalind’s training was orig- inally as a nurse, but she grew up around music. Her father, who was a talented violinist, also di- rected a choir. “I’ve been very, very enriched by knowing all these young folk, because they make life interesting — they keep your own thoughts young.” Einar is modest about his facility with Icelandic, but he spoke it well into his teens, and surprised friends at school with his knowledge of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar and Conan Doyle’s Hound of the Basker- villes, which he had experienced only in Icelandic. He recalls that as he was growing up, church and Sunday School were con- ducted in Icelandic, as were a weekend Icelandic school and choir practices. Einar and Rosalind still prac- tice their Icelandic in addition to their involvement in music and the arts. They hold an informal conversation class in their kitch- en, during which Icelandic texts are read and diffi cult words are highlighted for further study. Einar will teach bird carving Iceland this month. Although skilled carvers abound in Ice- land, they are not generally in- volved with realistic wildfowl carving. Einar was artistically in- clined in his 20s, taking an art course and doing a lot of sig- nage work in Arborg and the surrounding area. But, he says, “I got into the carving of birds by accident. I saw somebody that had done it and had a dis- play of it, and he let me take les- sons from him in how to do it.” The artist was James Russell in Winnipeg’s St. Boniface area. The biggest challenge, Einar says, is that “birds don’t stay still!” But he has taken photos and video of his subjects for ref- erence. He says a sculpture of even a very small bird such as a wren can take up to 40 hours. Rosalind and Einar live on the homestead Einar’s parents farmed, and where his grandpar- ents also lived. (Rosalind was born on a farm in Geysir; her parents were Johannes Palsson and Olga Holm.) The farm is called Drang- ey, named after an island in Skagafjörður in Iceland made famous for its association with Gréttir’s Saga and a nearly im- possible swim. Einar’s father was Johann Vigfusson from Arnarnes and Höfn. His mother was Emily Baldvinsdóttir Jóns- son, whose parents were from Skagafjörður. Einar’s grandmother Ingib- jörg missed Iceland so keenly that when her husband was clearing the land, he left a bluff of trees standing because it re- sembled Drangey as she has seen it at home. “There was a picture of Drangey in their bedroom all their years here,” says Rosalind. “When our farm was a hundred years old, we gave it this name.” 8 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • Friday 10 March 2006 PHOTO: DAVID JÓN FULLER Einar and Rosalind Vigfusson travel to Iceland this month. 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