Reykjavík Grapevine - jan. 2022, Blaðsíða 21

Reykjavík Grapevine - jan. 2022, Blaðsíða 21
Art Picks 21The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 01— 2022 Art Exhibitions For complete listin!s and detailed information on venues, visit !rapevine.is/happenin!. Send your listin!s to: events@!rapevine.is Opening EXETER HOTEL GALLERY Daughter Of Ice, Light and Fire Inspired by natural forces, French artist Georgette Yvette Ponté por- trays the beauty of Iceland through the female torso. The paintings take on a new dimension in the dark, when the silhouettes of the women take on the colours of the aurora borealis. This pop-up exhibition is in Reykjavík for one day only, so pop it in your diary. • Opens on January 29th • Runs until January 30th GER"ARSAFN KÓPAVOGUR ART MUSEUM Ad Infinitum Icelandic artists Elín Hansdóttir and Úlfur Hansson work in Berlin and New York respectively, but have come together to create this installation exploring the borders between the art that we see, and that which we hear. Elín’s approach is to create challenging immersive visuals, while Úlfur’s specialism in audio creation leads him to create sounds specific to the space. • Opens on January 14th • Runs until March 27th Past Perfect • Although he now lives in Sweden and was educated in the USA, artist Santiago Mostyn grew up in Zimba- bwe and Trinidad and Tobago. This exhibition of photography and video media explores that experience, employing footage of historical events, politicians and cultural figures. Past Perfect is a landscape where stories of colonialism, slavery, legends and personal experience converge. • Opens on January 14th • Runs until March 27th HAFNARBORG CENTRE OF CULTURE AND FINE ARTS A Few Thoughts on Photography – Vol. III Photographer Hallger#ur Hall- grímsdóttir explores how taking a photograph can seem so simple— ”just the push of a button”—mak- ing the resulting image almost an objet trouvé rather than a creation. But creative it is; mysterious and emotional, with aesthetics and instincts coming into play. And yet, at the same time, the process of photography is decidedly rooted in the scientific. • Opens on January 22nd • Runs until March 2022 Ongoing NATIONAL GALLERY OF ICELAND Of The North 'Of the North' (2001) is created from Steina Vasulka’s archive of video recordings of Icelandic nature, shot from macroscopic and microscopic viewpoints. So from microbes to crashing waves and melting ice, this is a visual document of the forma- tion and destruction of our planet. • Runs until January 9th Hello Universe It's 2021, and we're so over Earth; cue the entrance of Finnur Jónsson. The avant-garde art of Finnur—the first Icelandic artist to address outer space in his works, in the early 20th century—presents the artist's unfettered interpretation of the marvels of the celestial bod- ies. Always remember: we are but matter experiencing itself on a pale blue dot. • Runs until January 9th KLING & BANG Flygjur This non-profit artist run space, es- tablished by a group of artists some 18 years ago, presents a new group exhibition by Halla Einarsdóttir, Hanna Kristín Birgisdóttir and Smári Rúnar Róbertsson. Although Icelan- dic, all three artists all now live and work in Holland and Germany. At 6pm on the opening day Halla Einarsdót- tir will do a performance. We’re not sure what kind of performance—the information we have about this exhibit is teasingly enigmatic—so maybe just rock up and see… • Runs until January 23rd EINAR JÓNSSON MUSEUM Permanent Exhibition In 1909 Einar Jónsson—described on the museum's website as "Ice- land's first sculptor"—o$ered all of his works as a gi% to the Icelandic people, on the condition that a mu- seum be built to house them. The resulting edifice, constructed just over the road from Hallgrím- skirkja, now contains close to 300 artworks. There is also a beautiful garden with 26 bronze casts of the artist’s sculptures to enjoy. REYKJAVÍK CITY MUSEUM Settlement Exhibition This permanent exhibition— where Viking ruins meet digital technol- ogy—provides insight into Reykja- vík's farms at the time of the first settlers. Archaelogical remains uncovered on site dating back to 871 AD surround you. HAFNARBORG CENTRE OF CULTURE AND FINE ARTS Songbirds On a trip to Cuba some time ago, Ice- landic artist Katrín Elvarsdóttir noticed caged songbirds adorning windows of local homes, as many tourists to the island do. In her work, Katrín compares the loneliness of these isolated birds with the human experience of isola- tion. • Runs until January 16th Long Are The Trials Of Men &orvaldur &orsteinsson was a highly prolific artist who made use of most artistic media over his career, including music and writing in the form of novels, plays and poetry. However this retrospective exhibit features the visual aspects to &orvaldur’s creativity, focusing on the sculptures, installation pieces, paintings and video which bear tes- tament to his diverse creativity. • Runs until February 20th REYKJAVÍK MARITIME MUSEUM Fish & Folk Name a better duo than fish and Iceland. You can’t. So come learn about the history of Icelandic fisher- ies from row boats to monstrous trawlers. Melckmeyt 1659 Melckmeyt was a Dutch merchant ship that crashed near Flatey Island in 1659. Explore the wreck here. with two images of di$erent origins against each other. GER"ARSAFN Debatable Lands: Dialogues From Shared Worlds This is a mid-career retrospective of the 20-year collaboration between art- ists Bryndís Snæbjörnsdóttir and Mark Wilson. Snæbjörnsdóttir and Wilson approach their art partnership with an ecological and pluralistic view. In a research-based practice, they prompt discussion and thought about our changing world, and our own human role in those changes. • Runs until January 9th CULTURE HOUSE Treasures Of A Nation The Culture House was built in 1909, and was the first purpose-built gal- lery in Iceland. Towering above the surrounding town at the time, it was a popular spot to take in the natural vistas which have inspired local art- ists for centuries. This exhibit brings together a selection of paintings from the National Gallery, all inspired by Iceland and created from the 19th century onwards. • Runs until May 31st GALLERY UNDERPASS Matador Matador is a game of real estate created by artist Einar Garibaldi Ei- riksson, and resembles the pastime known internationally as Monopoly. In both games, contestants buy land with unreal money, then use more unreal money to build houses and hotels on it. The object is to screw other people over when an unlucky roll of the dice lands them some- where that they didn’t choose to be. Sound familiar? • Runs until January 31st REYKJAVÍK MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY Yfirgefin List Derelict farmsteads in the Icelandic countryside have long inspired Gu#mundur Óli Pálmason, who docu- ments them using old photography methods and uses the images to create fragments from the past. The artist o%en leaves these works where the photo was taken for anyone to find and take home, leading to the exhibition title which translates as “abandoned art”. • Runs until January 30th REYKJAVÍK ART MUSEUM ' KJARVALSSTA"IR Opus-Oups Artist Gu#n( Rósa Ingimarsdóttir lives and works in French-speaking Belgium. The word 'opus' denotes a piece of artwork, while 'oups' is French for 'oops'. Paired together the words demonstrate that art that can come from seemingly incon- sequential things. O%en employing found, forgotten or formerly used materials, Gu#ny Rósa brings the essense of 'opus-oups' to life. • Runs until January 16th Budding Earth Sculptors Carl Boutard and Ás- mundur Sveinsson explore natural design, where things take form through the interplay of rule, repeti- tion and deviation. • Runs until February 6th Kjarval And The Contemporary This site of the Reykjavík Art Museum is named a%er the painter Jóhannes S. Kjarval, indicating his central role in the story of 20th century Icelandic art. Kjarval’s influence is highlighted by his work being placed in conversation with pieces by contemporary Icelandic artists such as Ragnar Kjartansson and Gu#rún Einarsdóttir. • Runs until January 16th HVERFISGALLERÍ Recondestruction Following a devastating avalanche in Siglu)ör#ur, artist Hrafnkell Sig- ur#sson saw opportunity among the damage. Nature might smash lives, but perhaps it’s the role of art to put them back together. Perhaps once our reality has been dismantled, categorized and analyzed, art is the only way to reassemble it. • Runs until February 12th REYKJAVÍK ART MUSEUM ' HAFNARHÚS A Bra Ka Da Bra - The Magic Of Contemporary Art This exhibition aims to open the world of contemporary art up to a new generation. The titular magic word links magic and art in the wonder that both can conjure up in children and young people. • Runs until March 20th January 7th — February 3rd Public Pools Jan 22nd to Sep 25th - Museum Of Desi!n & Applied Art, Gar#ator! 1, 210 Gar#abær The outdoor, geo- thermal pool is the most interest- ing public sphere in Iceland. A place where strangers cross paths and acquaintances meet, it serves a purpose similar to the plaza in warmer climes, the pub in Eng- land or the café in France. It is a source of wellbe- ing, and a part of everyday life. This exhibition traces the development of public pools in Iceland from the beginning of the 20th century, when the focus was on learn- ing, hygiene and physical educa- tion. It illustrates how play later became a key element, then brings us to the present when a pleasurable, spa- like experience is o%en the goal. Architects and designers of vari- ous disciplines have taken a part in shaping this story, in collabo- ration with the public, the sta$ at the pools and the municipalities which operate them. The result— a collective e$ort by society—is design at its very best. JP Dieter Roth Until January 29th - i8 Gallery, Tryggvagata 16 German-born artist Dieter Roth moved to Reykja- vík in the 1950s to marry a local lady and, being one of Europe’s leading postwar artists, he inevitably had a strong e$ect on Icelandic creative culture. This exhibition o$ers some of the art- ist’s finest pieces with a focus on sculpture and paper media. JP MUSEUM OF DESIGN AND APPLIED ART GAR!ATORG 1 210 GAR!ABÆR OPEN TUE–SUN 12–17 WWW.HONNUNARSAFN.IS Instagram Facebook honnunarsafn EXHIBITIONS BATHING CULTURE 22.01 – 25.09. BEHIND SCENES ARCHIVING ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS OF HÖGNA SIGUR!AR DÓTTIR UNTIL 13.03. RESIDENCY STUDIO ALLSBER PRODUCT DESIGNERS 11.01 – 08.05. BEST BOOK DESIGN FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD 2020–2021 UNTIL 30.01. Mu!!ur Until February 13th - National Gallery of Iceland, Fríkirkjuvegi 7 Gu#mundur Thorsteinsson led a full life, though it was cut short by tuberculosis. This exhibit presents a wide selection of his work, created under his artist name Muggur, including scenes from his global travels, images of a merciful Christ curing the sick, and Muggur’s fantasy worlds where princesses live in castles and trolls lurk. JP Erró The Traveller Until Mar 27th - Reykjavík Art Museum, Hafnarhús, Tryggvagata 17 Gu#mundur Gu#- mundsson—ubiq- uitously known as Erró—has arguably the high- est international profile of any Icelandic visual artist. His activities have taken him all around the world. This exhibi- tion—selected from work that he has donated to the Reykjavík Art Museum—is curated around a travel theme. JP

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