Iceland review - 2014, Side 16

Iceland review - 2014, Side 16
14 ICELAND REVIEW A young woman fixes her hair while gazing directly at you through the mirror that frames her beautiful face. A boy with elvis hair plays his guitar with passion. A woman has her hair cut at home, with a child timidly looking on. These cap- tivating black and white domestic scenes, shot in the 1950s by lilý Tryggvadóttir, are among the highlights of a new exhibition at the national Museum and the reykjavík Museum of photography featuring selected works of 34 female professional photo graphers spanning 140 years. “lilý’s series, featuring friends and family at home, is among my favorites. And remarkably the photographs are now put on display for the very first time,” says photographer katrín elvarsdóttir, the exhibition’s curator. The exhibition is the result of a two year research period in which katrín explored the archives of every museum in iceland that agreed to take part. “My goal was to get an idea of the extent of women’s con- tribution to icelandic photography. But i was also looking for a common thread running through this long period of time. What i discovered, to my surprise, was an enormous amount of photography related to domestic life. Scenes from ordinary fam- ily life captured within the privacy of the By ÁSta andréSdóttir PHoTogRAPHS coURTESy oF tHE national MuSEuM of icEland AnD tHE rEykjavik MuSEuM of PHotoGraPHy home, containing a kind of intimacy that is hardly ever seen in the works of their male counterparts. it is as if the people in the photos were more willing to let down their guard with a woman behind the camera.” in light of her findings, katrín divided the exhibition into three categories: landscape & nature (displayed at the reykjavík Museum of photography), family/ domestic life and portraits/daily life (on display at the national Museum of iceland). “once i had found these three themes, i focused on selecting works that fitted into them, from an aesthetic perspective. This is not a conclusive retrospective; i’m not an art historian.” At the exhibition, photographs from different eras, but featuring the same composition and subject matter, pro- vide a clever link between different times. near a recent photo of a young man reading from a laptop computer is another photo of a young man reading a book, only a century earlier. Above a contemporary photographic series of a baby in its cradle during the first months of its life, hangs a photograph taken in 1915 featuring a simi- lar looking cradle. “i was constantly searching for these repetitions—these connections. i wanted to connect our times to the beginning of photography in iceland, although not in an obvious way.” The first professional female photographer was nicoline Weywadt, who opened a studio in djúpivogur, east iceland, in 1872. Back then, photography was a brand new trade in iceland and only women from rich families were able to study it abroad—usually in denmark—before opening their own studio. “But once A FeMinine FocuS In addition to landscape and portraits, family and domestic life have always been a prominent subject matter of Icelandic female photographers.

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Iceland review

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