Iceland review - 2016, Side 52

Iceland review - 2016, Side 52
50 ICELAND REVIEW ICELAND REVIEW 51 in 2015, she is now studying for a BA in Fine Arts at the Iceland Academy of the Arts. “Some people do meditation. But for me, time in a darkroom working with my photographs with some music and a little wine is my kind of meditation,” she says. IN THE FAMILY Photography runs in Kristina’s family. Whilst helping her mother clear out her apartment, she came across a pink box of film shot by her father. From this the col- lection Patrimony was born, a collection of her father’s photographs that she feels mirrors aspects of her own life and her own style of photography. “His photos reflect how I remember myself. In my work, I use his old camera and I try to shoot with old films.” She shows me a photograph of a couple. “These are my parents long before I was born. For me, it’s an idealized version of my parents in what could be a difficult relationship.” The collection Fisherman’s Wife is also autobiographical. Kristina’s husband worked briefly as a fisherman in Iceland. In this series, Kristina explores the sense of waiting that is the lot of a fisherman’s wife. In particular, she shares with me one tense episode. Thanks to the modern wonders of technology, she was able to track the fishing boat her husband was on until it disappeared from the screen. Fearing her husband was lost at sea, her many attempts at contacting the vessel were finally successful and all was well. POWER OF POETRY AND FILM Kristina’s work is also inspired by film. Having seen Solaris, the 1972 Russian science fiction art film, as a child, she was mesmerized by the images of a floating island. This provided the impetus for over 200 images of mountains in her ongoing Solaris collection. Here, she shows her keen eye and her ability to manipulate magnificent Icelandic land- scapes as mountains morph into islands, water mirrors cloud and lakes become air. Continuing the theme of being inspired by film, Kristina visited the EYE Film Institute Netherlands in Amsterdam, where she worked with old film in cre- ating her Decomposition collection. “I was PHOTOGRAPHY
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