Sequences Art Festival

Sequences Real Time Art Festival is an independent biennial, established in Reykjavík, Iceland in 2006.

The aim of the festival is to produce and present progressive visual art with special focus on time-based mediums, such as performance, sound art, video and public interventions. An offspring of the dynamic art scene that thrives in Reykjavik, Sequences is the first art festival in Iceland to focus on visual art alone. New artistic directors are hired to reshape each edition of Sequences according to their vision, making it unique and different every time.

Concept

The aim of the festival is to celebrate and exhibit cutting-edge visual art with a special emphasis on art in public/urban spaces. Sequences features time-based art - such as performance, video and sound art - and creates a cross-platform for these art forms as well as music and design.[1]

More than three hundred artists from around the world have participated in the festival, along with the artist-run galleries, the bigger museums and institutions in Iceland.

For Sequences Art Festival in 2008 (held October 11 to 17) the curatorial board decided to acknowledge renowned artists for their notable contribution to real-time art mediums. The honorary artist of Sequences 2008 was the Icelandic artist Rúrí.

The fourth Sequences Art Festival was held in 2009 (October 31 to November 7, 2009). The festival's honorary artist was the 80-year-old concept art legend Magnús Pálsson. Born in East-Iceland in 1929, Pálsson studied theatre design and art in the early 1950s and became an active participant in Iceland's embryonic avant-garde, collaborating with alternative theatre groups as well as with other artists such as Dieter Roth and later the SÚM-group of young artists that formed in 1965.

History

Sequences was founded by four artist-run venues: The Living Art Museum, Kling & Bang Gallery, The Dwarf Gallery and Gallery Bananananas (closed since 2007)—as well as the Center for Icelandic Art (CIA.IS). Each institute has a representative on the board, but all the major venues and cultural institutions in the greater-Reykjavík area have worked with the festival in one way or another. The first festivals in 2006-2008, were annual but in 2009 it was decided to slow the pace and hold the festival every other year.

For the first time, the Sequences Festival took place in different locations in the city center of Reykjavík, accompanied by exhibitions and video / film nights. A total of 140 participants from 20 different countries showed their artwork at the festival.[2]

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See also

References

  1. "Reykjavik, Iceland: a cultural city guide". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  2. History Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine. Sequences.

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