52. INTERNATIONAL ART EXHIBITION
June 10th - November 21st, 2007
Steingrimur Eyfjörd
Lóan er komin / The Golden Plover Has Arrived
The Icelandic Pavilion
Palazzo Michiel dal Brusa'
Cannaregio 4391/A / Strada Nova
Ca’ d’Oro vaporetto/waterbus stop (line no 1)
[click here for map and more info]
Iceland has had an official presence at the
Venice Biennale since 1984. This year, the Icelandic Pavilion will be located
at the beautiful Palazzo Michiel on the Canale Grande, a few minutes’
walk from the Rialto Bridge and close to the Ca’ d’Oro vaporetto
stop.
Steingrimur Eyfjörd has been selected to represent Iceland
at the 52. International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia. The
artist will produce a group of new works collectively entitled The
Golden Plover Has Arrived, commissioned by Christian Schoen, Director
of the Center for Icelandic Art and curated by Hanna Styrmisdottir, an independent
curator based in Reykjavik.
Steingrimur Eyfjörd is one of the foremost of a generation of artists
who came to prominence in Iceland during the 1970s. His prolific output over
the past 25 years draws on his experience not only as artist but as a comic
strip author, magazine editor, writer, curator and teacher. His work employs
a wide variety of media, including photography, comic strip, video, painting,
sculpture, performance, writing and installation. His art may appear equally
diverse conceptually: founded on influences as disparate as folk tales, Icelandic
sagas, women’s fashion magazines, religion, superstition, critical theory
and many other current topics, Eyfjörd’s chains of association
intersect at a nodal point of multiple meaning, forming a body of work that
is multi-layered and at times perplexing yet always reveals an articulate
and unexpected approach to the issues at hand.
Art historian Elena Filipovic has said of Eyfjörd’s work: ‘Confusion,
longing, and frustration are some of Eyfjörd’s underlying subjects
but these terms also inevitably describe how one feels in front of his works.
His investigations of materiality and form can seem absurd or enigmatic and
psychologically charged, yet they almost always prompt an awareness of the
emotional, physical, and cognitive experience of art.’ (Steingrimur
Eyfjörd, The National Gallery of Iceland, 2006)
The Golden Plover Has Arrived
The golden plover is a small wading bird, regarded as the harbinger of spring
in Iceland. Its arrival in the country in late March, early April, is invariably
announced in the local media. In The Golden Plover Has Arrived, composed of
14 individually titled works, Eyfjörd scrutinizes the culture, economy
and politics of various moments in Icelandic history, in a deconstruction
of prevailing interpretations of the creation of modernity in the country.
As part of his work, Eyfjörd consulted and collaborated with people from
all walks of life, among them artists and academics. He also visited a medium
who put him in contact with a
hidden person (a common Icelandic myth), normally invisible to human eyes.
The purpose of this was to buy a mythical being – an elf–sheep
– for The Sheep Pen, the central work in The Golden Plover. This somewhat
surreal act highlights one of the most intangible concerns in Eyfjörd’s
work: his interest in the function of consciousness in the construction of
physical reality. This aspect of Eyfjord’s work is also a reflection
of a belief and culture particular to Iceland, and can be further explored
in the curator’s introduction in the Biennale catalogue. A highly acclaimed
exhibition of his work at the National Gallery of Iceland in spring 2006 provided
a retrospective of Eyfjörd’s significant contribution to contemporary
art in the country. He has exhibited extensively in Iceland as well as internationally,
including solo and group exhibitions at the Reykjavik Art Museum, the National
Gallery of Iceland, Akureyri and Kopavogur Art Museums, the Living Art Museum,
Den Haag Gemente Museum, The Royal College of Art in London, Mücsarnok
in Budapest, the Centre International d’Art Contemporain at Carros,
the Meilahti Art Museum in Helsinki and the Henie Onstad Kunstcenter in Oslo.
In 2006 he was selected for the Carnegie Art Award and in 2002 he received
the Icelandic DV cultural prize for visual art.
Steingrimur Eyfjörd was born in Reykjavik in 1954 where he lives and
works.
Opening:
Press brunch:
Opening hours:
|
Wednesday, June 6, 20.00 (by invitation only)
Music performance: Olöf Arnalds, Ghostdigital
Thursday, June 7, 10.30 (with shuttle-boat to Giardini)
June 8/ 9/10, 9-18.00 Monday June 11, 10-18.00
regular hours, daily (except Mondays), 10-18.00
|
| Commissioner: | Christian Schoen |
| Assistant: | Rebekka Silvía Ragnarsdóttir |
| Commissioning Institution: | CIA.IS – Center for Icelandic Art |
| Hafnarstræti 16 IS-101 Reykjavík Tel: 00354-562 72 62 Fax: 00354-562 66 56 info@cia.is www.cia.is |
|
| Curator: | Hanna Styrmisdóttir |
| Coordination in Venice: | M+B Studio |
Press office:
|
Brunswick Arts (London) Benjamin Ward +44 (0) 20 7936 1297 bward@brunswickgroup.com Brunswick Arts LLP 16 Lincoln’s Inn Fields London. WC2A 3ED |
|
|
Official website:
contact Steingrimur Eyfjörd: |
|
Biennale website: Grand tour website: |
www.labiennale.org www.grandtour2007.com |
Catalogue: |
Ed. by Lóan er komin ef., CIA.IS - Center for Icelandic Art and Reykjavik Art Museum, Reykjavik 2007 |
Pressrelease
(pdf, 300 KB) | Save the date,
April 07 (pdf, 59KB)
Comunicato Stampa (pdf, 300 KB)
Fréttatilkynning (pdf, 106 KB)
Images (right click on link and choose "save target as")
We cordially thank all our sponsors for the support and the collaboration.
Main sponsors: |
|
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
|||
![]() |
| Other sponsors: | ||||
![]() |
![]() |
|||
|
![]() |
|||
| in collaboration with: | ||||
