Iceland review - 2019, Side 80

Iceland review - 2019, Side 80
78 Iceland Review and the outbreak of disease. “It was a dramatic age of no colour. We had little access to the outside world so we had to stay home and use what we had to survive. During this time, we used simple colours from our sheep and nature. We discovered that bearberry (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi) also gives us a consistent, deep black colouration. People from abroad said that Icelanders at this time looked like they were constantly going to a funeral, always in mourning. In reality, these were just dark times.” Emerging from the cocoon of the Dark Ages, Iceland fiercely regained its vibrancy once its trade routes and connections with the world were re-established. “We became colourful again in the 18th century when we started importing a lot of plants and, as a result, colours and chemistry. Blue became a widespread colour when we began importing indigo powder from India, which is the best source of blue from nature. To this day, indigo is our traditional Icelandic blue colour.” Making history her story Looking from above, Iceland is a divided land; dark and light, frozen ice set against the ashen moun- tains. Yet as you get closer to the earth, the land of fire and ice unfolds with an extraordinary array of colours that present the symbiotic relationship between nature and the history of its people. It is this thread between Guðrún’s story and the tale of wool dyeing that neatly tie the story of Iceland as a nation with the history of an individual; the strug- gle for Iceland to regain its palette and the conse- quent explosion of colour following the Dark Ages. Although it is an isolated nation, what surprised Guðrún the most on her discovery were the shared similarities in wool dyeing traditions between Iceland and other countries across the globe. “It has been done for the same way for thousands of years all around the world,” she discloses. “It’s just different methods, depending on the country and depending on the vegetation that they have. Though the stories we tell ourselves differ, the underlying chemistry remains the same.” Guðrún’s studio Hespishúsið will be moving this fall to Lindarbær farm, near Selfoss. We discovered that bearberry (Arctostaphylo uva-ursi) also gives us a consistent, deep black colouration. People from abroad said that Icelanders at this time looked like they were constantly going to a funeral, always in mourning.
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