Nature and natural vision tends to be dreamlike and romanticized in art. The interplay of light and colour that ignites impressions within the viewer. The personification of nature as the nurturing woman who tends to her creations and is therefore dubbed “the mother”. But is there romance in Mother Nature? In Iceland her face is more often that of an angry woman, thundering on with noise and destruction in her wake, a woman that should not be angered or defied in any way. There is nothing romantic about natural catastrophes and their influence on our surroundings. Destruction and death. Nor has mankind shown much romance or kindness in it’s dealings with Nature. Mankind wants to tame the land, cultivate and use it and cares little or nothing about how it affects the Earth, let alone it’s other inhabitants, the animals.
This is exactly what has been done to the wetland reserve in Vatnsmýri. It has been encroached upon from every direction and has now reached a critical state. The contract between The Nordic House, City of Reykjavík and The University of Iceland entails a plan which will improve the condition of the area and make life a bit easier for it’s inhabitants. When the contract was signed, Reykjavík’s mayor, Jón Gnarr, called it a small step for mankind but a huge step for the ducks.
Nature and our surroundings is the root of our image and through it we sense ourselves. Our attitude towards it is based on our background, upbringing and the habits we have learned from our ancestors. The Reykjavík pond area is impregnated with the cultural image of the citizens. We see it more as a place for the family to feed the ducks and a postcard image of the past than a wild area. The pond as a cultural thing and the pond as a natural habitat have different needs. The latter is in a crisis and the contract is meant to meet its needs while the first, in its present state, preserves the cultural heritage in our minds. But those needs do not cancel out one another.
The role of the artist is to explore, research, experience and ask about the significant issue. He should capture the influence of his surroundings and then impose in his art, thereby giving the viewer a chance to see the subject from as many perspectives as possible and at the same time broadening his own. A modern artist’s vision of nature has changed from being solely romantic to including the problems of man cohabiting with Nature as well.
from catalogue of Slippery Terrain exhibit at Nordic House 2012
text by Thora Gunnarsdottir