Events

fyrir hafvillu fram

BEK 11.01.2013 15.0011.01.2013 16.00

Published

The Norse trans-atlantic routes from around 1000 AD described in the sagas – which have been given final evidence to by the excavations of a Norse site at the northern tip of Newfoundland by Helge and Anne Stine Ingstad in the 1960s – mark the first contact between so-called Old and New World, and the encounter of Norsemen and native Indians completed the encircling of the globe by mankind.

The title refers to the amazing achievement of the Norse seafarers of crossing the Atlantic without any effective navigational tools: it means ‘onwards, despite hafvilla’, where ‘hafvilla’ is an old Norse expression for ‘being lost at sea’ which does not exist in modern Norwegian.
The work was begun during an artist residency at USF Verftet, Bergen and the completing footage was collected at the original historic site in Newfoundland.

fyrir hafvillu fram – a 3-channel video by Rona Rangsch, Norway/Newfoundland 2012, sound: Anja Lautermann (flute and arrangement) and Anne Krickeberg (cello)