The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.2003, Blaðsíða 27

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.2003, Blaðsíða 27
Vol. 57 #4 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 163 ativity and imagination to make the events that envelop us coherent. Jonasson recog- nizes that life in modernity is fraught with journeys and departures, and that we strug- gle to make sense of codes and symbols, places and relationships with which we are only partially familiar. Our understandings are always incomplete, and possible mean- ings are sutured together just like the stitches the artist uses to mend a painting’s surface, or to hold together the linen of Banner with Lance. We can experience this incompleteness as a perpetual sense of loss or displacement in the world or, as these paintings so poignantly suggest, we can learn to accept it as the substance, the ten- der beauty of our lives. Acknowledgements I wish to express my warmest thanks to Louise Jonasson for many things, not least the invitation to write about her work. Graham Asmundsson deserves credit for his considerable labours to co-ordinate all aspects of this exhibition. My thinking and writing about Louise’s art have benefited front conversations with the artist, as well as with Kristine Hansen, Gudrun Agusts- dottir, Svavar Gestsson, Astradur Eysteinsson, Vidar Hreinsson, and Robert McKaskell. - The essay was written for and pub- lished in the catalogue for the show entitled "Minningar um ey/Island souvenir" that was at Kjarvalssta>ir, Reykjavik 27 August to 9 September 2001. End notes 1. Vidar Hreinsson (2001) “Folly in Tailcoat, or Multiculturalism.” Kistan (www.kistan.is). “Islendingadags ra;da” (“Icelandic Day Speech”) translated by Vidar Hreinsson. Originally published in Heimskringla August 14, 1902, as Kanada. Islendingadagsminni, flutt a Islendin- gadagshatidinni / Red Deer nylendunni / Alberta, 2. agust 1902. 2. John Berger (1984) And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos. New York: Vintage International. 3. George Lakoff and Mark Johnson (1999) Philosophy in the Flesh. New York: Basic Books, p.3. 4. Astradur Eysteinsson (1997) Icelandic Resettlements. Symploke 5(1-2): 153-166, p.153. 5. John Berger, And Our Faces, p.14. 6. John Berger (1985) The Sense of Sight. New York: Vintage International, p.208. 7. Susan Stewart (1993) On Longing: Narratives of the Miniature, the Gigantic, the Souvenir, the Collection. Durham and London: Duke University, p. 135. 8. John Berger, And Our Faces, p.78. 9. Nadia Seremetakis (1994) The Senses Still: Perception and Memory as Material Culture in Modernity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, p.4. 10. ibid. 11. John Berger, And Our Faces, p.9. 12. Kristjana Gunnars (1992) The Substance of Forgetting. Red Deer, AB: Red Deer College Press, p. 125. Pickerel • Salmon Shrimp • Goldeye Lobster • Crab Hardfiskur and more! We pack for travel 596 Dufferin Avenue Winnipeg, MB 589-3474 l-------——-------□

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