Sarpur – Making Images of the Collection Available

Hafnarborg and The Icelandic Visual Art Copyright Association have now signed a contract regarding the digital publication of images of the museum collection in electronic databases.

This allows Hafnarborg to publish images of all registered pieces in the collection through the museum collection database Sarpur, granting the public more access to information on the Hafnarborg Collection.

Accordingly, we are working on making the images of the Hafnarborg Collection, which have until now not been accessible to the public, available through Sarpur.

Grants Awarded for the Year 2020

The grants awarded from The Museum Fund (safnasjóður) and The Visual Arts Fund (myndlistarsjóður), have been made known for the year 2020. Hafnarborg expresses its gratitude for the grants awarded to projects at the museum. From The Museum Fund, Hafnarborg received a grant for two projects: Hafnarborg and The Health Town (1,500,000 ISK) and Images in Open Access – a Contract with The Icelandic Visual Art Copyright Association (800,000 ISK). Work on both projects is already in progress.

In cooperation with The Hafnarfjörður Museum and others, Hafnarborg was also awarded with a special grant (öndvegisstyrkur) for one project: Collaboration on Museum Education – Policy and Implementation (12,000,000 ISK, over four years).

From The Visual Arts Fund, Hafnarborg received grants for two exhibition projects: Exhibition of Urban Soundscapes by Davíð Brynjar Franzson, Composer, Curated by Þráinn Hjálmarsson (300,000 ISK) and Catalogue for an Exhibition of Works by Þorvaldur Þorsteinsson, in Collaboration with The Akureyri Art Museum (500,000 ISK).

Moreover, the curators of the 2020 autumn exhibition, Becky Forsythe and Penelope Smart, were awarded a grant of 800,000 ISK for production of the exhibition The Wildflower, which will focus a futuristic lens on our human desire to know nature.

Grants, such as these, serve an important role in enabling the programme of Hafnarborg to thrive and have a positive impact on the community, with noteworthy projects, as well as providing a space for creative thought and expression to prosper.

Music Workshops – Tónagull po polsku in Hafnarborg

Hafnarborg and the town of Hafnarfjörður have lent their support to the project Tónagull po polsku (Tónagull in Polish), which will offer weekly music workshops for Polish-speaking children and their parents in Hafnarborg, beginning on Sunday March 8th. The project is also supported by the Polish Embassy in Iceland.

Tónagull is a research-based music workshop method developed by prof. Helga Rut Guðmundsdóttir, designed to fit the needs of infants, 0-3 years old, and their parents. The first Tónagull workshop was held in 2004 and they have been organized continuously since then, attracting hundreds of Icelandic families every year. The workshops take place once a week and have a playful formula, engaging musically both the toddlers and the adult participants. From the beginning, the material has mostly been based on Icelandic folk songs and nursery rhymes, i.e. the native language of the participants.

In 2019, the first Polish language version of Tónagull was launched. Preserving the methodic framework of the Icelandic original workshops and some of the original songs with translated lyrics, the workshops incorporate traditional Polish children’s songs, popular folk melodies and nursery rhymes. Tónagull po polsku immediately gained high popularity among members of the Polish community in Iceland.

More information on the music workshops, dates and time, registration and more, can be found here in Polish.

Please note that the workshops are temporarily off, in light of present circumstances.

      

Hafnarborg Receives The Icelandic Music Award 2020

On March 11th, Hafnarborg received The Icelandic Music Award 2020 for The Music Event of the Year (Single Event), in the field of classic and contemporary music, for the opening concert of the exhibition Phonemes, which was a part of the programme of Dark Music Days.

Hafnarborg would like to thank percussionist Jennifer Torrence, for an unforgettable interpretation of the works of Tom Johnson and Bergrún Snæbjörnsdóttir, and curator Þráinn Hjálmarsson, for his exceptional work. We also thank all the artists who took part in the exhibition and participated in the event programme connected with it.

It is not every day that an art museum receives a music award, but music has been an important part of the Hafnarborg programme since the early years. This award is an incentive for us to continue on this path.

Thank you all!

Phonemes – Icelandic Music Awards 2020

Phonemes – Exhibiting Music, which took place at Hafnarborg from January 26th–March 3rd of last year, has been nominated as The Music Event of the Year (Single Event) in the field of classic and contemporary music at The Icelandic Music Awards 2020. The judges‘ statement about the nomination says the following: „An exiting and original exhibition with a captivating opening concert. Working with the interplay of music and space, Jennifer Torrence‘s performance of Nine Bells by Tom Johnson was particularly successful.“

The exhibition celebrated the fifth anniversary of the concert series of the same name, which is dedicated to contemporary music and has been a part of the Hafnarborg programme since 2013. At the opening of the exhibition, Jennifer Torrence performed Nine Bells, as mentioned in the judges‘ statement, but the performance of the same work at the concert series in autumn 2016 (then by Frank Aarnink) was the spark that would later lead to the exhibition, where music and visual arts encountered each other in the timeless space of the museum.

The artists participating in the exhibition were Ásta Ólafsdóttir, Steina, Steinunn Eldflaug Harðardóttir, Logi Leó Gunnarsson, Jón Gunnar Árnason, James Saunders, Bergrún Snæbjörnsdóttir, Magnús Pálsson, Tom Johnson, Curver Thoroddsen and Einar Torfi Einarsson. The curator was Þráinn Hjálmarsson, composer and artistic director of the concert series.

In connection with the exhibition, there was also an extensive programme of concerts, musical events and performances, featuring local and foreign artists and musicians, such as Haraldur Jónsson, Ásta Fanney Sigurðardóttir, Marko Ciciliani, Barbara Lüneburg, Skerpla, Berglind M. Tómasdóttir and more. The events were also a part of the programme of Dark Music Days, receiving four nominations at this year‘s award ceremony.

Hafnarborg sends sincere thanks to the judges and affiliates of The Icelandic Music Awards for the honour shown to the institution, as well as the participants of the exhibition.

Museum Night at Hafnarborg – Life, Light and Shadows

Friday February 7th at 6 p.m.–11 p.m., Museum Night will take place in Hafnarborg, during which time the exhibitions will be open and a number of events will occur, such as a concert, a workshop, guided tours and more. The museum will be teeming with life, as the focus of the events and the exhibitions is on the relationship between man and nature or the interplay between light and shadows.

Programme:

Kl. 18:00
Opening Concert with The Hafnarfjörður Music School, performing a programme
of select film scores

Kl. 19:00
Light and Shadow Workshop for children and their parents, under the guidance
of Berglind Jóna Hlynsdóttir, artist

Kl. 20:00
Guided tour of the exhibitions Far and Silent Spring,
with Ágústa Kristófersdóttir, Museum Director

Kl. 21:00
“Scent of Spring” with Lilja Birgisdóttir,
artist and participant in the exhibition Silent Spring

Kl. 22:00
Guided tour of the exhibitions Far and Silent Spring,
with Ágústa Kristófersdóttir, Museum Director

There will also be a book market at Hafnarborg, where various books from the museum shop will be sold at a special price. In addition, guests can participate in a special Museum Night Scavenger Hunt, for the chance of reward. Later in the evening, singer Guðrún Árný leads a sing-along at Krydd Restaurant and there is Happy Hour at the bar from nine until midnight.

For more information about the events, please click here.

Autumn Exhibition 2020 – The Wildflower

The Art Council of Hafnarborg has selected The Wildflower as the autumn exhibition of 2020, from a number of excellent proposals submitted at the end of last year, but the winning proposal was submitted by curators Becky Forsythe and Penelope Smart. The Wildflower focuses a futuristic lens — sensitive and searching — on our human desire to know nature. Through this lens, audiences re-engage a swell of complex emotions and an acute awareness of our fragile world and our place in it. Working with artists from Iceland and Canada, the curators cultivate new space for a dynamic collision of climate activism, feminism and craft-based practice in contemporary art. Urging forward a renewed interest in traditional materials connected to local culture, artists transform wood, marble, plant dye, flowers, metal into new visions of textile, sculpture, painting and stained glass armour.

The conceptual vision for the exhibition is that of an open “field” in a northern landscape. In the expansive gallery space, audiences will encounter familiar yet unusual representations of flowers and nature: large, small, otherworldly, imaginative, disorienting, empowering. Our human relationship to nature is in flux, unfathomable and fantastical, felt as both a gendered and androgynous transformative power in this futuristic yet fragile field — a source of productive tension and enchantment within the size, scale and materials of the works.

The Wildflower has evolved out of the curators’ shared interest in climate change as an empowering phenomenon, natural materials and craft traditions in contemporary art, as well as new forms of representation in northern landscape. These genres also align in new and meaningful ways to emerging concepts of nature, power and the feminine. Envisioned as an innovative and female-led curatorial platform for all audiences, The Wildflower explores themes and materials related to innocence, violence, colonization, action, force and gentleness in powerful union with the innate qualities of nature, raising the question: how can that which is deeply familiar — our delicate flora clinging to rock — take root in new stories?

Becky Forsythe is a curator, writer and cultural worker. She holds a BFA Visual Art from York University (2007), an MA from University of Manitoba (2011) and a Postgraduate Certificate in Museum and Gallery Studies from Georgian College (2014). Her work focuses on varied systems of nature, collecting and acts of care, as well as placing value on collaboration in diverse spaces, situations and sensitivities. From 2015-2018 she held the position of Collection Manager at the Living Art Museum, where she led a number of projects and exhibitions, including Distant Matter (2018), Rolling Line (2017, co-curator) and Between mountain and tide (2018, co-curator). For Forsythe an exhibition is equally tangible and intangible, being a site of exchange, action and renewal.

Penelope Smart is a curator and writer. She holds an MFA in Criticism and Curatorial Practice from OCADU (2013), where she received the President’s Award for Outstanding Achievement in Graduate Studies. Smart has held curatorial positions at The Art Gallery of Ontario, MULHERIN galleries (Toronto and New York) and Eastern Edge Gallery (St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador). Her writing has appeared in Canadian Art, C Magazine and n.paradoxa, among others. With a focus on young artists at the beginning stages of their careers, Smart approaches exhibitions as a place of risk-taking, life and mystery.

The participating artists will be announced at a later date.

Silent Spring – Kliður and The Forest Service

On the occasion of the opening of the exhibition Silent Spring, by Hertta Kiiski, Katrín Elvarsdóttir and Lilja Birgisdóttir, curated by Daría Sól Andrews, we are pleased to announce that The Reykjavík Forest Service (Skógræktarfélag Reykjavíkur) will plant a tree for every guest who attends the opening.

We are deeply grateful for this contribution from The Forest Service, which plays a critical role in preserving and protecting our environment all year round and helps us give back to nature in this way.

We would also like to call attention to a special happening featuring the choir Kliður, along with Lilja Birgisdóttir, which will take place at the opening.

The opening will be on Saturday January 18th at 3 p.m. At the same time, the exhibition Far will also open, with works by Þórdís Jóhannesdóttir and Ralph Hannam. Both exhibitions are a part of The Icelandic Photo Festival, going on from January 16th–19th.

Hoping to see you at Hafnarborg.

Conference at Kjarvalsstaðir – Art in the Public Realm

Thursday November 28th at 10 a.m.–4 p.m., Hafnarborg will participate in a conference at Kjarvalsstaðir, in partnership with the Reykjavík Art Museum and the Research Center in Museum Studies. The conference will take a look at art in the public realm and its meaning, both for local communities and in a broader context. Special focus will be on the origin of these kinds of projects, how they come to be, how they are financed and how they are planned.

The keynote speaker will be Tyra Dokkedahl, a Danish curator and journalist specializing in art in public spaces. Other speakers are architect Steve Christer at Studíó Grandi, Ágústa Kristófersdóttir, Director of Hafnarborg, artists Anna Hallin, Olga Bergman, Carl Boutard and Ólöf Nordal and Örn Baldursson from the Government Construction Contracting Agency. Ólöf Kristín Sigurðardóttir, Director of the Reykjavík Art Museum, will open the conference and Sigurður Trausti Traustason, Head of Collections and Research at the Reykjavík Art Museum, will lead the conference.

The participation fee is ISK 2.500. Coffee and a light lunch included. Registration required here.

Autumn Exhibition 2019 – Everything at the Same Time

The Art Council of Hafnarborg has chosen Everything at the Same Time as the autumn exhibition of 2019, with curators Andrea Arnarsdóttir and Starkaður Sigurðarson. The idea behind the exhibition is to explore the way artists tackle the freedom present in contemporary visual arts. How it is possible to extract meaning from art, which may be anything, a painting, a child’s toy, papier mâché, a movement, an idea, opera, plaster. On exhibit, will be works of different media, from oil painting to performances, in an effort to unite the scattered notions found in contemporary art.

The aim of the exhibition is not to show a section or an overview of how art is today, but to explore how artists, faced with this freedom, form fromit meaning. How art can take any shape, while still speaking the same language. How an oil painting on the wall in someone’s home is the same art, a part of the same history of art, as mushrooms made to grow in a bright, white exhibition space. How art – and art history – is a compressed thing, where everything exists at the same time.

Andrea Arnarsdóttir took applied studies in culture and communication at the University of Iceland, graduating with an MA degree in 2018. Her graduation project, the exhibition Superabundance at the University, drew quite a bit of attention. After graduation, Andrea went on an internship at the Artipelag, art museum in Stockholm. There she gained an insight into the museum world and the curatorial work, as well as working closely with the museum‘s curator of pedagogy.

Starkaður Sigurðarson has a background both in visual arts and writing, but after graduating from the Iceland University of the Arts, he went on to complete an MFA degree in creative writing at Goddard College in spring of 2018. He has exhibited in many places around Iceland, most recently participating in the exhibition Pressure of the Deep at The Living Art Museum in 2018, in addition to writing for Víðsjá, at the Icelandic National Broadcasting Service, penning text for artists and museums, and editing the visual arts publication Stara.

Each year, Hafnarborg asks for proposals for the museum’s autumn exhibition, with the objective of motivating new people and selecting a curator or curators, who present an interesting idea. In this way, the museum aims to provide an opportunity for emerging curators, who are looking to gain more experience. The task of reviewing the proposals and choosing the winner is in the hands of the Museum Director and the Art Council of Hafnarborg.

With the autumn exhibition series, Hafnarborg wishes to open a channel for new ideas, in line with the museum’s mission, to strengthen and support various programmes of art and culture, through different perspectives. The exhibitions and related events have become an important part of the programme at Hafnarborg, being a catalyst for further development and discussion about art and ideas.

The participating artists will be announced at a later date.