Iceland review - 2016, Page 66

Iceland review - 2016, Page 66
64 ICELAND REVIEW COMMUNITY SIGRÍÐUR ERLA GUÐMUNDSDÓTTIR - CERAMICIST - LEIR 7 Sigríður, ceramicist and owner of Leir 7 Gallery, moved to Stykkishólmur from Hafnarfjörður in 2007 to be “closer to the clay,” as she puts it. A potter for 25 years and former teacher—she taught at the Iceland Academy of the Arts and The Reykjavík School of Visual Arts—Sigríður runs the only ceramics workshop in Iceland that uses Icelandic clay. She sources the raw material from the farm Ytri- Fagridalur in the Dalir region of West Iceland—which is still a 130-kilometer (80-mile) drive away. Icelandic clay var- ies quite a bit on a dark red- brown scale due to high levels of iron. Sigríður fires the clay, which is low-fire, at 1150°C (2100°F), at which tempera- ture the ceramic reaches its maximum strength. Icelandic clay can also be used as a glaze on high-fire clay. Sigríður also produces items from French porcelain and clay from the UK, with Icelandic glaze and fired at 1240°C, which gives it a dark brown color and soft texture. “I love the dark color of Icelandic clay but I also enjoy working with porcelain. It’s like cream,” she says. She also adds splashes of color to some of her items by placing black pebbles she collects from the local Djúpalónssandur beach on them before they go in the kiln. The pebbles melt, creating spots of metallic fin- ish on the wares. Sigríður’s primary technique is slip casting using plaster molds. She speaks of her craft with a deep passion. “It’s like working in collaboration with the clay, I let it decide.” Leir 7 is part of the Éco- no musée network, a group of workshops in northern Europe which are open to the gen- eral public, allowing artisans to share their knowledge and passion while selling products made on the premises. The gallery is open from 2-5 pm Mondays to Fridays and from 2-4 pm on Saturdays. Sigríður also receives groups on organ- ized tours, whom she wel- comes with a tasting of her favorite snack—local buttered dried fish with sugar kelp and dulse—as well as local blue mussels and seaweed, present- ed on her ceramic fish-shaped plates. Her work, which includes both practical pieces—like plates, cups, bowls and sushi sets—and works of art—like ceramic cod heads (pictured right)—is sold exclusively at her gallery. “I wanted to have it really local and decid- ed from the beginning to try and just sell it here. I didn’t want to stock my work all over the place,” she says. The local municipal office and sev- eral local businesses have sup- ported the gallery by ordering items for use by their staff or customers. There has also been interest from abroad: when we visit Leir 7, she’s working on an order of custom-made piec- es for the owner of an overseas hotel who recently visited the gallery. The art of ceramics has a short history in Iceland. In 1930, Guðmundur Einarsson, artist and father of interna- tionally-acclaimed artist Erró, began using clay in his work. No earlier evidence of clay use exists, which Sigríður finds interesting given the long his- tory of ceramics in general. Foreign visitors find this fas- cinating, she says. “A German tourist once asked me: ‘How did you eat before?’ [in ref- erence to dishes and cutlery]. Ceramic art has been part of other cultures for so long but it came very late to Iceland.” Besides reaching tourists, Sigríður also hopes to help educate Icelanders about ceramics. “I also want to bring awareness here. Some people come here and say ‘Wow, I didn’t know it was so difficult to make a cup!’” Before relocating to the town, Sigríður had been a regular visitor ever since she bought an island in Breiðafjörður 25 years ago. “We go there a lot in the summer now,” she tells me. Although she knows the area well, she says it’s refreshing to not have any family con- nections. “People found it strange that I moved here, that I had no family here, no connections, to start a com- pany. But I think if my family was from here, if I had grown up here, I would have long since moved away! I like the freedom. There is no politics, I don’t know the history, I’m not bound by anything, it’s great.” Ceramics by Sigríður featuring eider duck designs.
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Iceland review

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