Iceland review - 2013, Page 67

Iceland review - 2013, Page 67
ICELAND REVIEW 65 them to obtain information about Iceland and the developments in our society. Hardly any material about Iceland was available in foreign languages. This sparked the idea for a publication to provide the outside world with access to regular information about our country and nation. Even though I had no available funding to execute the project, the idea didn’t leave me. Slowly but surely I started laying out my strategy. As a journalist I didn’t have much to do with the layout. People didn’t really con- template the appearance of a publication in those days; it was mostly fixed. However, while I worked at Morgunblaðið, it was the task of the journalist on the foreign news desk to go down to the printing depart- ment at the end of the night shift and assist with putting together the front page of the newspaper for the following day. I gradually became interested in the design and began looking at newspapers and magazines in a new light. THe Beginning By Haraldur J. Hamar A much abbrevi- ated version of Haraldur’s account of the history of Iceland Review in the catalogue to Five Decades of Graphic Design, a ret- rospective exhibition of the work of Gísli B. Björnsson. Shortly after graduating from junior college in 1955, I was unexpectedly offered a job as a journalist at Morgunblaðið [Iceland’s leading newspaper]. Raised in the atmosphere of rural culture in Ísafjörður in the West Fjords, I had rather expected to become a servant of the church. But I became very interested in journalism and have never regretted that career choice. The first years at Morgunblaðið I worked mostly on the foreign news desk and gradually established contacts abroad. I became aware of how difficult it was for I felt that the magazines in Iceland more or less lacked taste and style, were not mod- ern-looking and not at all comparable to the variety of professionally designed maga- zines available abroad. It would be pointless to offer foreigners a magazine with a char- acterless Icelandic design, despite the text being informative and written in English. A magazine that was meant to present Iceland to the outside world had to catch the eye of readers for being modern and stylish. It would have to be attractive. I came into contact with and started working with Gísli B. in 1963. Our col- laboration was inspiring from the very beginning. He was certainly up for the task and we soon became friends. I was thrilled when he first showed me the progress of his work. The innovative cover had a new and fresh feel. After the magazine went into distribution, I came to realize that I was far from the only one in whom the magazine evoked such emotions. Gísli’s designs were never old-fashioned. The collaboration with him gave me a new vision and, with the years that went by, valuable experience. The initial creation of the magazine’s main characteristics in appearance and tone, evolved with time into a special look and feel. Nonetheless, the design allowed for sufficient flexibility and opportunities to give each issue indepen- dent features without compromising the big picture. In Gísli’s hands, each issue became its own little world within the all-encom- passing frame created in the beginning. And he took special care when designing the cover. It was a definite novelty in magazine publishing in Iceland. Ground-breaking. Iceland Review was the first magazine pub- lished in Iceland with professional graphic design. It was also the first magazine pub- lished in English to present Iceland interna- tionally. And it wasn’t backed by the govern- ment—as is widely the case—but rather by eager and ambitious individuals and compa- nies. We usually got a very positive response, both at home and abroad. Iceland Review had struck a chord. Translated by Eygló Svala Arnarsdóttir. Iceland Review celebrates its 50th anniver- sary later this year. Fifty years is a long time in publishing in our country. The first issue of this originally quarterly magazine, founded and edited by Haraldur J. Hamar, and co-founded by his former school mate Heimir Hannesson, appeared in September 1963. Haraldur J. Hamar was at the helm of Iceland Review for 38 years, until the end of the last century, and i was fortunate to work with him for 18 of those years. Still today, i call him to ask for advice and tell him our plans. i started working at the magazine just over 30 years ago and learned more from Haraldur in the first three weeks on the job, in the summer of 1982, than in the three years prior, studying pho- tography in Sweden. More than anything, Haraldur wanted to publish a magazine of an interna- tional standard, to be leading in design and photography, a standard we’ve tried to maintain to this day. He has a good eye for images and design. The maga- zine had to be in english, its content informative and interesting, and the design modern and bold, with big imag- es of icelandic culture and landscapes. Haraldur wrote a new chapter in the history of icelandic publishing and photojournalism. Introduction by Páll Stefánsson. ANNIVERsARY

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