Tuesday May 12th at 7-9 p.m., a guided meditation led by Jenny Huld Aradóttir, also known as Ravi, will take place among Ragna Fróða’s works in the exhibition Echo. Through meditation, song, drumming and sound, Ravi will invite guests on an inner journey inspired by Ragna’s art and the magic of the forest. Guests are encouraged to bring a cushion and blanket and make themselves comfortable in the space.

In the exhibition, Ragna Fróða invites us into an alluring world of patterns, colours, forms and textures. Her visual language is at once familiar and foreign, nostalgic and new. The starting point for the works in the exhibition is a series of ink drawings created in a state of flow, in direct dialogue between the subconscious and the hand. Through a multi-layered process, the uninhibited line of the drawing is transformed into digitally embroidered works that exist on the threshold between the abstract and the figurative. Ragna’s work centres on the creative process itself – the interplay of colour, texture and the narratives embedded in the patterns and symbols of textiles. By combining traditional craftsmanship with contemporary technology, Ragna seeks to expand the boundaries of craft, textile design and visual art.
Jenny Huld Aradóttir has studied pedagogy, yoga and shamanic traditions for decades, seeking to bring diverse approaches together into a unified whole. She has travelled the world, meeting diverse cultural groups and teachers united in supporting humanity through times of transformation. Ravi has recently returned from the Amazon rainforest, where she spent eleven months with Indigenous people of the Huni Kuin tribe. There, she had a unique opportunity to connect with the forest’s ancient wisdom and to live and learn with people who have been called guardians and messengers of nature. In recent years, Ravi has devoted her work, studies and life to community-building rooted in respect for nature, its wisdom and the spirit both within and around us.
Free entry – everyone welcome.
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