2015 The Life in the Land
University of Richmond Museums, Virginia, US
The Life in the Land: Two persons show by Anna Líndal and Erling Sjovold, University of Richmond Museums, Virginia, US.
The title of the exhibition comes from a passage in an artist’s book from 2014 by Líndal, which reads, The earth is restless in Iceland. Some form of movement, often within a volcano or glacier, which occasionally leads to more serious unrest. The life of the land is always with MTG and me, both at home and when we travel together. It is some form of a presence, which takes up space, perhaps like a third person in the relationship.This restlessness or inner-life of Iceland’s landscape, with its distinctive geography of volcanoes, glaciers, lava fields, and beaches, has been the subject of much of Líndal’s work. Participating in annual expeditions with the Icelan Glaciological Society since 1997, Líndal considers how the environment is empirically studied and recorded, questioning the verity of measuring the land without also measuring ourselves within it. On a recent expedition to the Grímsvötn volcano, which last erupted in 2011, Líndal swam in the large water-filled crater while others in her party used mechanical and digital devices to study the lake, using her body as a measuring device to experience the icy cold conditions and buoyancy of the water, as pictured in one of the images in the exhibition. An earlier multi-channel video installation in the show, “Borders,” from 2000, addresses the deep kinship between Iceland’s sense of national identity and its landscape, probing the separations maintained between nature and the body, natural resources and the domestic, and between the land and its various representations.
From February 16 through the 27th 2015, Líndal was a visiting artist at the University of Richmond, participating in the exhibition’s opening events and engaging with The Parking Lot Project, a university-wide, collaborative, interdisciplinary, site-specific creative project led by Sjovold and executed by UR students, faculty, and staff that meditates on environmental sustainability. More information on the Parking Lot Project, which is part of the 2014-2015 Tucker-Boatwright Festival of Literature and the Arts, can be found on the website http://www.richmond.edu/tucker-boatwright/project.html
Organized by the University of Richmond Museums, the exhibition was curated by N. Elizabeth Schlatter, Deputy Director and Curator of Exhibitions, University Museums, and Kenta Murakami, ’15, art history major, University of Richmond, and the 2014-2015 Curatorial Assistant, University Museums. The exhibition and programs are made possible in part with the support of the University’s Cultural Affairs Committee and the Office of International Education.
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Stine Hebert - curator