Riverbed
Yesterday afternoon I skived off the last session of the workshop I’m attending and took the train to the small town of Humlebæk, which is about 35 north of Copenhagen and is the site of the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art. The purpose of my visit was to attend an invitation-only preview of a new installation by Olafur Eliasson called Riverbed. The invitation to this came relatively recently and it was only the coincidence of my being here at this workshop that made it possible for me to attend.
As it turned out, I arrived quite early and the weather was fine, so I took the chance to wander around the sculpture park before the main event. There are many fine works there. This, for example, is by Henry Moore:
This one is by Henri Laurens
And so to Riverbed. This is a large work featuring boulders and gravel, brought all the way from Iceland, which have been used to recreate a section of the landscape of Olafur’s native land. The distinctive colouring and granularity of the raw material produces terrain of a texture that must look very alien to anyone who has never been to Iceland. The installation is contained within a space which is contained within and divided by stark white-painted walls, with rectangular gaps where necessary to let the water through from room to room. These boundaries, with their geometrically precise edges, affect the experience of the naturalistic landscape in a very interesting way. The Riverbed itself may look “natural” but the structures surrounding it constantly remind you that it isn’t. Viewers are permitted to wander through the piece wherever they like and interact however they please, sitting down on a boulder, paddling in the stream or even just watching the other people (which is mainly what I did). I don’t know what’s more interesting, the work itself or the way people behave when inside it!
Here are some pictures I took, just to give you a flavour:
Anyway, after that we adjourned for a drinks reception and a splendid dinner in the Boat House, which part of the Louisiana complex. Being neither an artist nor an art critic I felt a bit of an outsider, but I did get the chance to chat to quite a few interesting people including, by sheer coincidence, a recent graduate of the University of Sussex. The Boat House looks out towards the island of Hven, home of the observatory of Tycho Brahe, so naturally I took the opportunity to drink a toast to his memory:
After that I had to return to Copenhagen to write my talk, as I was on first this morning at 9.30. This afternoon we have a bit of a break before the conference excursion and dinner this evening. The excursion happens to be to Louisiana Museum of Modern Art (although we’re all going by bus this time); dinner is in the cafeteria rather than the Boat House, though..
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August 20, 2014 at 2:51 pm
I could have mentioned that Humlebæk was actually the site of a Swedish invasion of Denmark in 1700, which resulted in a heavy defeat for the Danes who had to retreat south to Copenhagen, but total conquest was avoided by negotiations that ended in a peace treaty.
August 20, 2014 at 4:30 pm
Surely the Vikings who raided and then invaded Britain were Danes and Norwegians rather than Danes and Swedes?
“When the bridge from Sweden to Denmark (or vice versa) was built, many pundits predicted that Sweden would move closer to the Continent, but if anything the reverse has happened.”
That’s a pretty extreme example of continental drift!
August 20, 2014 at 4:26 pm
That’s art? Your pic of your toast to Tycho is better!
I had the best holiday of my life in Iceland, in summer 1983, driving round it in a Land Rover with 5 friends. It is like the ‘Flow Country’ north of the Scottish highlands, only wilder.
August 21, 2014 at 10:22 am
What is art? I don’t know how to answer that question, but I think it’s unfair to dismiss something without experiencing it properly. The whole point about an installation is that you experience it by moving about and interacting with it, not just by looking at a few pictures of it.
August 21, 2014 at 12:41 pm
It’s just a bit of outdoor Iceland in a room. You can get lots more of it by going to Iceland. Where’s the creativity or the technique in that?
August 21, 2014 at 3:04 pm
You can get outdoor Iceland in outdoor Iceland, but putting outdoor Iceland in indoor Denmark is quite a different thing!