Iceland review - 2004, Síða 36

Iceland review - 2004, Síða 36
A British modern music journal, The Wire, once described Reykjavík as a city where you can “stumble across one good contact … and an entire community of experimental artists sud- denly opens up to you.” (January 2002) That one good contact has materialized, albeit semi- permanently, as a building. The opening of KlinK & BanK has floated Iceland’s experimen- tal art scene one more fathom closer to the sur- face and has brought new life to a community of young artists, many of whom see this project as a revolutionary move for the city’s creative community. The story of how this building came into the hands of the artists is unprecedented in Iceland. The National Bank of Iceland, finding itself with prime real estate in downtown Reykjavík, decided to donate a building with nearly 5000 square meters of floor space to artists living in Reykjavik. To plan the building and oversee its operation, they contacted the ten visual artists who run Gallery Kling & Bang and asked them to convert the building into a workspace, gallery, and veritable factory for young artists and musicians. Nina Magnúsdóttir is one of the ten core mem- bers of Gallery Kling & Bang, which recently had its one-year anniversary. The gallery was started originally to promote young artists, but has recently been asked to host prominent artists visiting from abroad such as Paul McCarthy and Jason Rhoades. “When we start- ed our gallery, [Gallery] Hlemmur was also going, but now there isn’t much else that is really covering that edge of art,” Nina tells me outside of her office in the compound. Nina has become the administrative head of the KlinK & BanK project. A RETRO CYCLE OF APPROXIMATELY TWENTY YEARS KlinK & BanK is not the first time in Iceland’s history that artists have taken over a house and converted it into a workspace. As sure as a band with that Joy Division sound, or legwarm- ers as a fashion statement, everything that is happening now has happened before in some form or another. In the winter of 1982, at a time when the punk movement was peaking in Iceland, approxi- mately forty to fifty people moved into the JL House at Hringbraut 118, a building that now houses part of the Reykjavík Art Academy and the Nóatún grocery store. The house was called Gullströndin Andar (or “the golden beach lives again”) after what Pétur Hoffman, “the King of the Dump”, called that stretch of coastline when it was still a landfill for the city of Reykjavík. Bands like Útangardsmenn and Oxma played there fre- quently, and the artists, some of whom lived and worked there, painted to the music of the time – in the style of the time, using shipyard paint, flouting intellectualism. It was an exciting time, but according to Gudmundur Oddur “Goddur” Magnússon, “no one feels particularly romantic about it.” Goddur is a professor of graphic design at the Icelandic Academy of the Arts. He has a work- space in Klink & Bank and he was around in 1983, documenting the Gold Beach movement. THE NINE MONTH DEADLINE Part of the ambiguity of KlinK & BanK lies in the uncertain time frame that the artists are working with. When the old newspaper build- ing was donated by the bank it was only for a period of nine months, which means that everyone will most likely have to leave in October. The building has actually already been sold to developers who plan to tear it down to build more apartment buildings. The building is right in the centre of the East End, an area that is in heavy development. The general attitude among the people work- ing in the building is that if they work hard enough in the space and create something worthwhile out of the project, then KlinK & BanK can continue in another space. “Initially, it’s more of a concept than a roof,” says Nina, “but with the roof we have the possibility to make the concept happen. That’s kind of the original idea - that we could find a roof some- where else.” From a short walk through the building, it is clear that it could take some time to get every- one out in October. Over the past three months, life has crept into the many corners of the house. There have been concerts in the “Russia” space upstairs. Vesturport, a local independent theatre company, has put on sev- eral shows in an elevator shaft in the base- ment. Two full-length albums have almost been completed in two of the small recording studios in the music area. This is not even to mention the other one hundred artists who are painting, sculpting, weaving, sewing, and oth- erwise creating in offices throughout the com- pound’s three floors. To top it off, last week- end a young woman named Saga glued all of her possessions together in the “Berlin” space downstairs and then left for Denmark. The whole thing is almost too much to grasp, like some sort of artistic hysterical chaos. But that, Nina insists, is part of how it has to work. “There is no way of controlling this energy,” she says with enthusiasm that removes any pos- sibility of argument. “I think it’s quite impor- tant to realize when you’re trying to organize something like this, that you don’t organize it too much. It’s very easy to kill things with too much organization. Of course, it’s a balance.” IS IT PUNK, IS IT NOT PUNK? All this talk of anarchy and chaos when dis- cussing KlinK & BanK might lead some to think that the building is full of leather-jacketed toughs sporting bright purple Mohawks. The fact is, the artists & musicians in the house, and the generation many of them belong to, are far from punk. This, according to Goddur, is another main difference between the Gold Beach movement and this one. “The anger isn’t as obvious with this generation. Everything with them is cute. But they cannot stay cute forever. This generation will start to bite.” Whatever fashion they use to get their mes- sage across, it is clear that the people working in KlinK & BanK are the doers in music and art in Reykjavík. “KlinK & BanK is not a movement of rebels,” Goddur explains while showing me his scanned-in photographs of the Gold Beach group. “It’s a movement of people who want to be taken seriously. Many of them have already made something of a name for them- selves.” He lists off names to strengthen his point. Birgir Örn Thoroddsen, (“Curver”), runs a stu- dio with two other producers in the house. Under the name Tími, they have scheduled weekly seminars about music in the meeting room of the house. Kitchen Motors, an art and music collective, held their fifth birthday party in the house. A crowd of about two thousand people were treated to a day-long concert and retrospective of their work. Snorri Ásmunds- son, a visual artist who uses his national identi- ty in many of his more conceptual pieces, recently ran for president. The artists in the house are planning an exhibition in July deal- ing with the image of the artist as madman, which will coincide with the next open house, titled, appropriately enough, “Carnival”. The schedule of events in the house is proudly dis- played in a wall-sized calendar in the house, where people can add their own events and match itineraries with other members. While most people will have to wait for the open houses to see the inside of KlinK & BanK, others have been more lucky. That “one good contact” mentioned by The Wire is still around. Nowadays though, instead of merely giving you a vague schedule of underground events, he can take you up the street and give you a guided tour. Alex MacNeil is a staff writer. “If we had put in just visual arts [in Klink & Bank], it would have been all the visual arts in Iceland. We thought that […] it was much better to keep the project in the realms of what we think is contemporary and inter- esting, so we wanted anybody in any art form to be able to join. All this gives the house a life that you can’t find anywhere else in Iceland.” “I’ve talked about it for years in visual art circles that we have to do something - that no one’s going to do it for us. […] Then you get into the position where you have to stand up and be a woman of your words. Now I just have to do it.” “The similarities are many between the two houses, but there are several main differ- ences. With [Gold Beach], every- one knew where things were heading. It was all about paint- ing and this anti-intellectual expression. KlinK & BanK is bigger, and in a sense more anarchistic. It is too big to control and nobody knows where this is heading.” klinK_BanK 15.6.2004 12:24 Page 34
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