Iceland review - 2012, Side 16

Iceland review - 2012, Side 16
14 ICELAND REVIEW CONvERSINg WITH CLAy Ceramics and glass artist Kristín Sigfríður Garðarsdóttir talks about her love for Japanese ceramics tradition and Icelandic light, the fleeting boundar- ies of art and design and elfish cups that stimulate the brain. I guess I’m a late-bloomer,” declares Kristín Sigfríður garðarsdóttir when we meet in her studio in Kópavogur one rainy autumn day. Born in Hafnarfjörður in 1959, Kristín graduated from the Arts and Crafts Academy of Iceland in 1997, moving on to studying at the Danish Design School in Copenhagen from 1998-99 where she specialized in ceramics and glass. “I didn’t start studying art until after the kids were born. I’ve always loved drawing and painting and was good at it but didn’t believe I could make it my living. I had planned to become a nurse,” reveals Kristín. She worked at the hospital for a couple of years, did some other jobs, but eventually decided to become an artist at the encouragement of her friends and family. Now, Kristín runs Kirsuberjatréið, a gallery and design store, with nine other female artists. She has held solo and group exhibitions in Iceland and elsewhere Europe, and in Japan, which has a special place in her heart. “In Iceland there is little tradition for pottery. I find it nourishing to be in places like Shigaraki, which has a 1100- year history for clay burning. They respect ceramic artists more.” Kristín’s last exhibition in Japan was at the Tao gallery of Contemporary Ceramic Art in Tokyo in 2011. Entitled ‘Faraway Blue,’ it’s a play on the Icelandic proverb fjarlægðin gerir fjöllin blá, literally: ‘the mountains look blue when seen from a distance. ’ “The angle changes from afar,” Kristín says in description of the proverb. “It’s good to go away because it gives you a different per- spective. But it’s also an illusion: the mountains aren’t blue.” Kristín’s pieces are decorative, but functionality is important to her as well. “I like to design beautiful things that feel good to touch and can be used in daily life. Things on the border between art and design,” she says. Her most popular products are so-called ‘elf cups.’ Thought of as gifts for elves and people, the curvy ceramic cups are either to be held with the right or left hand, as indicated with fin- By Eygló Svala arnarSdóttir Portrait By Páll StEfánSSon additional Photos By Páll KjartanSSon

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