×

Subscribe to our newsletter

Highlights From the Previous Week, Partnered Events and Haikus. View our Newsletter archive

An Epic Journey of Fluctuating Emotion: The art of Ragnar Kjartansson

Nov 18, 2020

Ragnar Kjartansson, the Icelandic artist’s performance and video work, mines the experience of monotony with its repetition and a stretched duration.

Scroll right to read more ›
Text by Oliver Basciano

Siegfried Kracauer is an underrated sage of the twentieth century; overlooked, despite, arguably predicting the information overload we experience in the digital age. Years before ideas on the attention economy gained traction, and decades prior the Internet and mobile technology exacerbated the problem, the German sociologist wrote in 1924 that people living in dense cities or tuning into the radio suffered “permanent receptivity”, producing a middle class “pushed deeper and deeper into the hustle and bustle until eventually they no longer know where their head is.” People were in a state of constant arousal that meant, Herbert A. Simon, the psychologist who would at last bring this thinking into the mainstream in the 1970s, “A dearth of something else: a scarcity of whatever it is that information consumes. What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients.”

Ragnar Kjartansson work is boring. Of course, it’s not boring boring. I’m just writing that to shake you from your over-stimulated malaise. No, the Icelandic artist’s performance and video work has long mined the experience of monotony. Repetition and a stretched duration are Kjartansson’s hallmarks. An early work, God (2007), for example, features Kjartansson as a crooner fronting an orchestra who play along with his single-line refrain which repeats ad nauseum “Sorrow conquers happiness”. Seven years later the artist persuaded the rock band The National to likewise perform their song Sorrow over and over again for six hours one day in 2014. A Lot of Sorrow takes the audience on an epic journey of fluctuating emotion: the melancholy and raw emotion of the original song is soon replaced with mirth at the absurdity of the situation; hours in the tedium and a sense of cynicism percolate as the band goes through the motions. The now-familiar lyrics begin to gnaw away however until one emerges from the work psychologically wrung out. Kjartansson himself has spoken of how performing in his own work can take its toll: representing Iceland in the Venice Biennale in 2009, the artist was left drained after spending every day of the exhibition’s six-month run painting the same sitter’s portrait over and over again.

The discombobulation the viewer feels on experiencing Kjartansson’s epic work (and, presumably that which the artist feels himself) is perhaps aligned with Kracauer’s idea of “extraordinary, radical boredom”. It provides a space of concentrated looking in which all other stimuli are closed off. In a sense, a return to a classical notion of artistic connoisseurship, yet (to paraphrase Leo Tolstoy’s description of Victorian art critic John Ruskin), Kjartansson is a man who “thinks with their heart”: within its knowing play to our emotions his work contains questions of identity, authenticity and the elasticity of time.

Nowhere is this more noticeable in Figures in the Landscape, the artist’s new commission for the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Copenhagen (and also recently shown at the artist’s gallery, i8, in Reykjavik). Consisting of seven single-channel videos, every twenty-four hours in length, the week-long work features silent young medics, dressed in white coats, interacting, meandering, and resting across a variety of stage set environments. The ‘action’, so-to-speak is reduced to events such as a meeting held in a woodland scene, two doctors hug in a snowstorm, another wanders a desert hands held behind his back. For great swathes of the week’s worth of footage, however, the painted scenery is left devoid of actors. To watch the work is to view a clock slowly ticking away: leaving one in an almost transcendental place of meditation.

This article is republished from TLmag 31 Extended: Islands of Creation.

Cover image: God, 2007, single-channel video installation, Commissioned by TBA 21, Vienna and The Living Art Museum, Reykjavik, Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York & i8 Gallery, Reykjavik.

Figures in Landscape (Monday), 2018 single channel video, 24 hours Commissioned by the Danish Building and Property Agency for the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York & i8 Gallery, Reykjavik
Figures in Landscape (Monday), 2018 single channel video Commissioned by the Danish Building and Property Agency for the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York & i8 Gallery, Reykjavik
The End, 2009 Performance in the Pavilion of Iceland at the 53d Biennale di Venezia Photo: Rafael Pinho Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York & i8 Gallery, Reykjavik
A Lot of Sorrow, 2014 6-hour performance featuring The National, The VW Dome, MoMA PS1, New York Sunday, May 5, 2013, noon - 6 pm
photo: Elisabet Davidsdottir Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York & i8 Gallery, Reykjavik
Scenes From Western Culture, Dinner (Jason Moran and Alicia Hall Moran), 2015 single channel video Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York & i8 Gallery, Reykjavik
Woman in E, 2016 Performance originally performed at MOCA Detroit, Friday, January 15 - Sunday, April 10, 2016 Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York & i8 Gallery, Reykjavik
Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz, Berlin "Krieg" Oper in einem Akt, von Ragnar Kjartansson mit einer Komposition von Kjartan Sveinsson, Eingespielt vom Deutschen Filmorchester Babelsberg, Premiere: 11.3.2016, Regie & Bühne: Ragnar Kjartansson, Komposition: Kjartan Sveinsson, Aufnahme: Filmorchester Babelsberg, Kostüme: Tabea Braun, Maler: Christoph Fischer, Anton Hägebarth, Camilla Hägebarth, Ragnar Kjartansson, Julia Krawczynski, Anda Skrejane, Licht: Johannes Zotz, Mitarbeit Bühne: Axel Hallkell Jóhannesson, Jana Wassong, Ton: Jörg Wilkendorf, Dramaturgie: Henning Nass, mit: Maximilian Brauer, Copyright (C) Thomas Aurin Gleditschstr. 45, D-10781 Berlin Tel.:+49 (0)30 2175 6205 Mobil.:+49 (0)170 2933679 Veröffentlichung nur gegen Honorar zzgl. 7% MWSt. und Belegexemplar Steuer Nr.: 11/18/213/52812, UID Nr.: DE 170 902 977 Commerzbank, BLZ: 810 80 000, Konto-Nr.: 316 030 000 SWIFT-BIC: DRES DE FF 810, IBAN: DE07 81080000 0316030000 Krieg, 2016 Opera in one act by Ragnar Kjartansson. Composition by Kjartan Sveinsson in a recording by the German Film Orchestra Babelsberg Photo: Thomas Aurin Courtesy of the artist, Luhring Augustine, New York & i8 Gallery, Reykjavik 10. Portrait of RAGNAR KJARTANSSON
Back

Articles you also might like

Roca Gallery, an online platform founded by Roca in 2019, which features articles and in-depth stories that dive deep into topics around architecture, design, and urbanism, launches a new topic this month on the theme of “Taking Care”.

After its inaugural exhibitions in June, mudac, the Museum for Contemporary Design and Applied Arts, will present its first major exhibition, A chair and you, which will take over the entirety of the museum’s new exhibition halls in the heart of Lausanne’s new arts district, plateforme 10.

On April 5th, PAD Paris opens its doors for 5 days of modern and contemporary decorative arts, design, and craft. TLmag previews some of highlights to expect at this esteemed fair.