Look at Us

Look at Us

Look at Us

Vulnerable and endangered animals are Halla Gunnarsdóttir´s subject in her exhibition Look at Us. Halla presents 27 oil paintings, all of which portray vulnerable species. The animals are shown with distinctively human features and placed in often humorous poses, settings and situations that strive to evoke an emphatic link between the subject and the viewer. By anthropomorphizing its subjects the work hopes to show that what separates us from animals is very little and, at the same time, to communicate the gravity of the man-made crisis they face.

In the past few years Halla´s body of work has focused on conservation and vulnerable animals, inspired in part by her travels, for example to Antarctica and Indonesia. In September 2015, Halla traveled to the Arctic with a group of scientists and nature photographers to raise awareness of the effects of climate change on the region.

A central tenet of sustainable thought is the need to protect biodiversity, a concept used to define the diverse nature of our habitat. Biodiversity is fundamental to the survival of species and habitats that together make life on the planet. Today we are witnessing an ever greater erosion of biodiversity, which has far-reaching effects on the world’s natural environment and hence on our well-being.

Human interference in the ecosystem is one of the greatest causes of disruption and change in natural habitats. This includes agricultural systems, construction, the mining of natural resources, as well as the depletion of forests, seas, rivers, lakes and soil. It also results in the invasion of foreign species, pollution and climate changes that today are called global warming.

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Halla’s figuratively presented animal subjects engaging in human-like actions provoke an emphatic reaction in the viewer. A close look at the paintings strengthens the sense that the distance between humans and animals is not significant. Her work is thus a powerful reminder of the importance of treating nature and animals with respect. This is true everywhere, even in areas like the Arctic where very little life thrives. The exhibition demonstrates that the artist’s travels and studies in the region have had a profound influence on her work. She succeeds in communicating to the viewer the importance of actively participating in conservation efforts.

The most important element in future conservation debates should be the concept of sustainable development. The logic behind it is that in their constant quest for progress and harnessing of natural resources, humans must not deplete natural reserves to the degree that we leave the next generation with a damaged environment.

Polar bears are among many vulnerable species whose lives are in danger from the changes caused by the melting of the polar caps in their natural habitat and which have eroded their chances of feeding themselves. It seems logical that the Icelandic public should care about the danger that many animal species now face. But Árni Stefán Árnason, a lawyer who focuses on animal rights, believes that widespread ignorance characterizes attitudes towards animal rights and conservation. This lack of respect is demonstrated when polar bears are killed when they drift here with Arctic ice. He has pointed out possible solutions: in Canada, for example, when such an event occurs a team is dispatched in a helicopter to shoot the animal with tranquilizers. The animal is then transported to more distant areas. Árni has pointed out that animals that arrive here can be transported back to Greenland using this method.

There is an ongoing debate on what should be done with polar bears that drift to the country. But regardless of people’s opinions it is important that the government formulate a future policy for action since the odds of polar bears drifting to the country have increased with the warming of the seas. An action plan that safeguards biodiversity and protects endangered animals is needed.

Changing circumstances call for a revision of the values and ideas we build our society and economy on. It is important to build on the ideology of sustainable development in which the economy, social equality and environmental conservation join to ensure acceptable living conditions for all inhabitants of the planet.

Works of art are well suited to raise awareness of sustainability issues. The philosopher Sigríður Þorgeirsdóttir discussed the relationship between words and images in her article Long and Short Shadows: The Truman Show. The article is a philosophical meditation on reality and artificial reality. She quotes Herbert Marcuse who believes that men live in ‘a society of organized stupidity […] consumers who are fed by the media and made one-dimensional.’ She points out that Virilo assumes that the image has become more powerful than the written word. The language of images is subtler than the written word because it has easier access to our sensibilities. So long as our eyes are open we are open to visual stimulation, but to read we have put ourselves into a particular state of mind.

The arts are an important part of Education for Sustainability. Such education has to build on a moral foundation that can create a general change in attitudes and lead to a brighter future for all. The arts can affect our emotions, give us inner peace, cause tension, inspire new ideas, provide advice, arouse empathy, make us angry and disturb viewers. The arts can change attitudes. All of the above is true of the work exhibited in Look at Us.

Halla’s exhibition shows that we are here in the hands of a well-educated practitioner of the arts. Halla began her art studies at the Florence Academy of Art and completed an M.F.A  in figurative sculpture from the New York Academy of Art in 2003. On graduating she was awarded the NYAA Sculpture Research Fellowship. She also holds a B.A in Liberal Arts from the New School in New York and an MBA from the Sorbonne in París.

The composition and treatment of colour in the exhibition’s works have a powerful effect, to some degree reminiscent of mid-century art. It is not surprising that her background is in Italy.

Halla is rapidly developing her visual imagery and hopefully she will continue on that path, whether in painting or sculpture.

Ásthildur B. Jónsdóttir
Assistant Professor at the Iceland Academy of the Arts


Artists website: hallagunnarsdottir.com

Unnar Örn J. Auðarson – Efnahagsleg áhrif / Economic Impact 2010- 2016

Unnar Örn J. Auðarson – Efnahagsleg áhrif / Economic Impact 2010- 2016

Unnar Örn J. Auðarson – Efnahagsleg áhrif / Economic Impact 2010- 2016

Unnar Örn J. Auðarson er fjórði myndlistarmaðurinn sem sýnir á Happy hour opnun artzine. Í þetta sinn er hún haldin á Kaffi Vinyl Hverfisgötu 76.

Efnahagsleg áhrif er mikið notað hugtak og stór hluti af orðræðu bæði stjórnmálamanna sem og stórfyrirtækja í samtímanum en Efnahagsleg Áhrif var einnig nafn á tímariti sem gefið var út af Upplýsingaþjónustu Bandaríkjanna – The United States Information Agency á árunum 1972- 1990 til að kynna utanríks og efnahagsstefnu Bandaríkjanna.

Unnar Örn J. Auðarson býr og starfar í Reykjavík. Hann lauk MA námi við Listaháskólann í Malmö 2003, og diplómanámi frá Myndlista- og handíðaskóla Íslands 1999. Í myndlist sinni vinnur Unnar Örn með staðreyndir sem og hugsmíð stóru-sögunnar, gefur henni annað samhengi og líf innan veggja myndlistarinnar. Síðasta áratuginn hefur listamaðurinn markvisst unnið bókverk, auk annars prentefnis tengt sýningum sínum. www.unnarorn.net

The Living Art Museum (Nýló) receives donation from Ólafur Lárusson’s studio

The Living Art Museum (Nýló) receives donation from Ólafur Lárusson’s studio

The Living Art Museum (Nýló) receives donation from Ólafur Lárusson’s studio

The Living Art Museum is endowed with a large selection of material from the studio of artist Ólafur Lárusson (1951 – 2014). Family of the late Ólafur Lárusson, have gifted the Living Art Museum a large portion of material, spanning two decades from around 1970 – 1990, gathered from Ólafur´s art studio. Amongst this donation is part of the artist´s personal library, his film collection, negatives, slides, photographs, sketches, VHS recordings performance documentation, exhibition catalogues and invitations, artistic research and experimentation, as well as proposals for works in the form of drawings, snapshots and conceptualizations that had never been fully realized.

The Living Art Museum will move their exhibition space to the newly renovated Marshall House in Grandi, alongside Kling and Bang Gallery and Ólafur Elíasson. The new space in the harbour will open with a retrospective exhibition echoing Ólafur´s practice and contribution as one from the young and radical generation of contemporary artists who surfaced during the seventies. It will include documentation of his performance work and other substantial material that had not been shared with the public eye during his lifetime and pull together works from The National Gallery of Iceland and Reykjavík Art Museum, along with those in private collection from friends, family, and collectors.

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A photograph from Ólafur´s 1978 Rainbow performance in SÚM Gallery.

oli1Curators Þorgerður Ólafsdóttir, Director of the Living Art Museum and Collection Manager Becky Forsythe have titled the exhibition Rolling Line, the namesake to a photographic work Ólafur completed in 1975. The artist himself is seen somersaulting through nature within Rolling Line, and the work references the possibility of a continuous line always ending in a circle. This reflection is well related to the core of the exhibition, which aims to shed new light on the process and period of the artist, from 1971 when he started as a student in The Icelandic College of Art and Craft, until the early eighties when Ólafur began to turn away from one of his main mediums, the photograph.

Ólafur Lárusson was born in 1951 and raised in Austur-Meðalholtum, South Iceland and in Hlíðar – 105 Reykjavík. He studied at the Icelandic College of Art and Craft, now Iceland Academy of the Arts, from 1971-74 and subsequently in Haarlem, Holland, where he graduated from Atalier ´63 in 1976. Ólafur was an extremely prolific and productive artist during the seventies and played a key role in shaping the priorities of the icelandic art scene at that time. He was amongst the last artists to be accepted into the SÚM Gallery movement, a founding member of the Living Art Museum, and the first indications of the museum were stored in his studio on Mjölnisholt prior to when the board of Nýló received the facilities at Vatnsstígur 3b in 1980.

oli2Rolling Line, 1975

“The gift from Ólafur´s studio, marks a turning point for Nýló and is also an important addition to art history. The archive is the first of its kind to be accepted by the museum, where light is cast upon the life and practice of the artist in such a way. With the family´s donation, video documentation from Ólafur´s Rainbow performance – which was performed in SÚM Gallery in 1978 and had been lost for many years, has now surfaced. The recording shows the artist breaking hanging glass plates that have been painted the colours of the rainbow, with his head – the broken glass swinging back and forth alongside it.

This contribution also strengthens Nýló´s research into collecting, preserving and archiving performance art, and underlines the immeasurable value of the insight provided through otherwise unseen material gathered over time in the artist´s studio; conceptual-work, the process and evolution of artworks, and specific focuses, streams and remains of certain periods.”

Ólafur passed away on December 4th, 2014. On 10th September he would have celebrated his 65th birthday and the museum would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge his contribution to shaping the scene of Icelandic art.

On behalf of the Living Art Museum,
Þorgerður Ólafsdóttir and Becky Forsythe

Space / Drawing and Conceptual Horizons

Space / Drawing and Conceptual Horizons

Space / Drawing and Conceptual Horizons

 By Becky Forsythe

Space / drawing, which brings together numerous works on paper and in sculpture by Þóra Sigurðardóttir, offers a record of the information that we use to read or map space. Reconsidering the spaces that surround us and our investments in these places as lines, impressions, framed memory or conceptual horizons becomes a way of creating an alternative viewpoint, such as a drawing or diagram. When the works in this exhibition are taken into closer consideration, Þóra´s art practice is revealed as an extension of her life experiences: things she has stumbled on and become fascinated with, observations that transform, and an attention paid towards growth, repetition, exchange and tangibility as it appears to her in the surroundings. She takes on the role of the artist as a mobile perceiver by offering different angles of the fields we occupy as consideration for structures found in everyday life and society – structures and perceptions which are in the end fluid, moving and able to shift.

Most of the work presented here is recent, aside from a few elements, including an older recording that arrives from time spent in Denmark and is revisited in Arinstofa. The video shows a tree, covered completely by white webbing and is not far off or unlike Þóra´s approach to drawing. The natural lines drawn through the tree by the web are organic and visceral, with numerous layers to work through and visual language to decipher. This work, like the entire exhibition, is a look into the qualities of material in transformation, the process of outlining negative and positive spaces, and environmental sequences that feed Þóra´s ongoing explorations in navigating and recording. One viewpoint of a tree in a natural urban habitat becomes endless material for investment when it is transformed into a sketch of something else. Through the attention paid to the found subject, the video reminisces over a certain experience in a place during a particular moment, which becomes a thread running through the exhibition. The perspective given in Gryfja also considers this point in a series of movements through built environments..1954, Akureyri) art practice applies drawing, and often other mediums, as a way to expand patterned repetition, inversion and transformation through the nature of material, process and environment. Working in two- and three-dimensional forms she places emphasis on navigating layered surfaces and structures.

In Ásmundarsalur you will find large works on paper, with titles referring to their medium, hung alongside a collection of digitally-printed impressions collected from cut trees. Both of these series examine line as a build-up of different layers, which push how the surface is read, or multiple surfaces in this case, as space is added and subtracted in positives and negatives. Space is seen as a series of layers – from the ground up – a sequence of environments that absorb multiple surfaces and reference not only time, but distance, measurement and shifts within those structures. Drawn and constructed grids appear throughout and help to breakdown the levels in a mathematical way, reflecting an obvious human-made system of recording. Organic lines then trace different and contrasting pathways that cut the systematic surfaces and their structure most distinctly in the large drawings and the sculptures. In this dichotomy the hand of the artist, or the human, draws pathways across our measured and perhaps material world. As mirrored also within the tree-ring records, nature and human experience remain a sacred part of the investigations Þóra undertakes. These act as a reminder of the innate worlds that exist beyond those readily visible to us. In the case of the trees, spent or exhausted natural remains and processed leftovers are investigated in such a way that they see new light and are expanded in a context where they are free from their usual boundaries. The surfaces contribute to adapting physical (and intangible) structures as a new way of seeing particular environments, like those things we find in the artificial world.

Þóra´s works reveal another side to the patterned one that surrounds us, sometimes from domestic interiors, as navigations through those interiors, recordings, or built settings. In particular, this reference point, the view offered to us through the artist, can function as a meeting place for the imagination and its physical counterparts. Reading surfaces becomes more of a way of understanding our own position in the spaces we occupy and the relationship between the two. The key to entering into Þóra´s work is to keep one foot on each side of the division, or better yet, allow for both sides to permeate the other.

As you wander through the exhibition, amongst conceptual horizon lines, I encourage you to consider the space your body occupies, what surrounds you and the paths you create as you move and construct trails. Allow the works to be reference points or reminders that calibrate the awareness of your movements and gestures, both as negatives and positives. It is my hope that a reflection of other environments will lead you to recollect or connect to the way Þóra´s work builds new representations. Our environments can be examined as planes layered one on top of the other and map-like as they consider different, but specific moments. Whether these moments can be translated into other forms of space-making is left up to the viewer. And, the viewer is encouraged to investigate this matter further. By taking a longer look into these things, we might recognize an attachment to our own experience as it contributes to the way we read the world around us.

Space / drawing at Listasafn ASÍ from August 12th until September 4th 2016


Þóra Sigurðardóttir´s (b.1954, Akureyri) art practice applies drawing, and often other mediums, as a way to expand patterned repetition, inversion and transformation through the nature of material, process and environment. Working in two- and three-dimensional forms she places emphasis on navigating layered surfaces and structures.

After completing studies at the Icelandic College of Art and Craft (1979-81) Þóra pursued graduate studies at Det Jyske Kunstakademi in Denmark (1987-91). She then received an MA in Cultural Studies and Cultural Management from the University of Iceland (2012) and has studied Philosophy and Art History at the Open University.

Þóra´s work has been exhibited locally and internationally since 1991 and can be found in private and public collections in Iceland and abroad including the Reykjavík Art Museum, The National Gallery of Iceland, and the Living Art Museum. Other projects have included managing and curating Dalir og hólar, a mobile exhibition project in Breiðafjörður and developing the guesthouse Nýp in West Iceland.

For more information visit: www.thorasig.is

Becky Forsythe received her BFA from York University with a concentration in Visual Arts (2007), her MA from the University of Manitoba with a research specialization in cultural history and contemporary art (2011) and a Graduate Certificate in Museum and Gallery Studies from Georgian College (2014). Becky is a writer, curator and Collection Manager at the Living Art Museum (Nýló) in Reykjavík, where she currently lives and works.

Photographs from exhibition: Courtesy of Vigfús Birgisson.

REITIR – Tilraunakennd smiðja á Siglufirði

REITIR – Tilraunakennd smiðja á Siglufirði

REITIR – Tilraunakennd smiðja á Siglufirði

REITIR er tveggja vikna smiðja sem hefur farið fram á Siglufirði á hverju sumri síðan 2012. REITIR byggja á þeirri hugmynd að með því að stefna saman framtaksömu og öflugu fólki úr ólíkum starfsgreinum, nýtist fjölbreytt reynsla þeirra sem grunnur að áhrifaríku samstarfi. Margir þátttakendur smiðjunnar eru úr skapandi greinum, þó inná milli megi finna stærðfræðinga, forritara, mannfræðinga og ýmsa aðra. Það er mikilvægt að hafa sem mesta breidd innan hópsins, en hver þátttakandi er vandlega valinn úr fjölda alþjóðlegra umsækjenda.
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REITIR er staðbundin smiðja sem dregur bæjarfélagið inní starfið á marga vegu. Smiðjan er í samstarfi við Fjallabyggð, ýmsa sjóði, fyrirtæki og Alþýðuhúsið á Siglufirði sem skaffar smiðjunni húsnæði og aðstoð við framkvæmd. Þátttakendur er hvattir til að vinna með bæjarbúum, vera sýnilegir og nýta þau tækifæri sem bærinn býður uppá. Þau mæta á staðinn án fyrirfram mótaðra hugmynda en með opinn hug gagnvart óeigingjörnu samstarfi og drifkraft til að skapa. Það fer mikið fyrir smiðjunni á hverju sumri en áhersla er lögð á enduruppgötvun og nýnæmi í not á almenningsrýminu. Verkefnin sem hafa verið unnin á REITUM síðastliðin fimm ár eru mjög fjölbreytt, en þátttakendur hafa t.a.m. opnað tímabundið kaffihús á ruslahaugunum, miðlað sögum heimafólks í gegnum sérhannað snjallsímaforrit, haldið hundasýningu, unnið tímabundið í bakaríinu, framkvæmt gjörninga um allan bæ, tekið yfir gamlar verksmiðjur, gefið út ýmis smárit, haldið úti metnaðarfullri útvarpsdagskrá og margt fleira.
Myndbandagerð er gegnumgangandi tilrauna og listform á meðan á smiðjunni stendur.
Smiðjan skiptist í tvo hluta: fyrri hluti REITA er tileinkaður rannsókna- og hugmyndavinnu, en seinni hlutinn úrvinnslu og framkvæmd verka. Fyrstu fjórir dagar smiðjunnar fara í að kynna þátttakendum fyrir Siglufirði á skilvirkan þátt. Verkefnastjórar Reita sjá um þessa hnitmiðuðu kynningu á bænum, m.a. með opnum viðburðum, leiðsögnum um bæinn og matarboðum hjá heimafólki. Þátttakendur hafa svo um tíu daga til að vinna og framkvæma verkefni, innblásin af Siglufirði á einn eða annan hátt.
Reitir vinna að gegnumgangandi endurskoðun Siglufjarðar þar sem þátttakendur beita sérkunnáttu sinni í samstarfi við aðra til að móta nýja nálgun á mynd bæjarins. Reitir eru verkfæri sem má beita á bæinn til að skoða möguleika, prófa lausnir og gera tilraunir án langtímaskuldbindinga, þar sem flest verkefnin eru tímabundin. Smiðjan veitir bæjarbúum nýja sýn og gefur þátttakendum tækifæri á að þróa sína eigin iðju, með áherslu á skemmtilegt, skapandi og sýnilegt samstarf. Reitir eru grunnur að skapandi alþjóðasamstarfi í þágu Siglufjarðar en er einnig miðpunktur í vaxandi tengslaneti sem teygir sig þvert yfir heiminn.
REITIR eru styrktir af Alþýðuhúsinu á Siglufirði, Uppbyggingasjóð Norðurlands Eystra, Evrópu Unga Fólksins, Erasmus+ og Fjallabyggð, auk fjölda fyrirtækja á Siglufirði.
Nú vinna skipuleggjendur REITA að bók um smiðjuna sem kemur út síðar á árinu og nefnist Tools for Transformation. Markmið hennar er að miðla hugmynda- og aðferðarfræði smiðjunnar og veita öðrum innblástur. REITIR fjalla um sjálfsprottið menningarstarf og frumkvæði einstaklinga, en bókin mun innihalda ýmislegt gagnlegt fyrir frumkvöðla á öllum sviðum: aðferðir við val á þátttakendum og leiðir til að tengja samfélagshópa og rannsaka nærumhverfi, mataruppskriftir fyrir stóra hópa og margt fleira.
Verið er að vinna að bók um REITI og eru myndverkin að neðan úr því verkefni. Teikningarnar eru unnar af Morgane Parma og Sophie Haack
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