Everyday here in Blönduós is always quite a surprise. When I think, hmmm, how am I going to top yesterdays adventures…it magically happens! Today, I got to meet two Icelandic artists. Finnbogi Petursson and Reynir Katrinarson. Finnbogi is a prominent artist here in Iceland. He is not fiber, but is influenced by connecting Art & Science, which is totally my thing! He had an exhibition here that was really unique called “Bay”. 

Bay lets you experience where the Blanda river meets the Hunafloinn. He took a raft with high-tech equipment that measured in real time the rise and fall of the waves in the estuary, then connected it directly inside the exhibit area to a green laser light. The exhibit was in a very old, dark middle floor of a barn. When you sit in this dark exhibit, you hear the sounds underneath the ocean and see the light going up and down like the the water. It gives you a sense of floating and imbalance. It felt like being underwater and part of the ocean. Very beautiful. 

https://www.baldbranding.com/projects/floi-bay

https://www.akleifum.is/project/finnbogi-2022

While at that exhibit, some locals were telling us about a fiber artist who lives in the old church just down the road and to go visit him. So we did! We literally just walked into his house/church and said hello. lol. His name is Reynir and he did all types of art. He learned to weave in 2016 here at the Icelandic textile center. A very interesting artist who uses anything and everything. A very ‘salt of the earth’ person. He was also a musician and played some of his music for us. It was wonderful! I highly recommend listening to it. He did an album in 2017 where each poem/song is about a different Norse god. 

https://www.instagram.com/seidlaeti/

https://www.facebook.com/reynir.katrinar

Today’s Music: Annie Lennox, and of course, Seidlaeti by Raynir

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Image from the Bay exhibition by Finnbogi Pétursson
Off to meet a fellow fiber artist who lives in the church!
Raynir Katrinarson showing his weaving/felting works. All Icelandic wool
Reynir showing us his weavings. He felts on them as well. Beautiful combination
Reynir weaves on driftwood and rocks!
Driftwood weavings
Raynir weaves on driftwood
Raynir Katrinarson does a form of crochet with knots. If it gets damaged, it won't unravel.
Old stove in the old church
Seidlaeti (musical group)
Black sand, silver ocean
You can see my house! 1st orange roof from the left!