“In Iceland, feminism is a very big thing,” says Ragnar Kjartansson, who spoke to artnet News the night before flying from Reykjavik to San Francisco to stage his new durational performance, Romantic ...
So that’s pretty much the whole story, up there in the headline. Oh! This will be on May 5, that’s So that’s pretty much the whole story, up there in the headline. Oh! This will be on May 5, that’s ...
When the Icelandic artist Ragnar Kjartansson was a teenager, he grew up listening to the UK post-punk, gothic-rock band The Cure. On the back of their album Wish was a quote from Percy Bysshe Shelley: ...
Tucked away in ICA Boston's galleries, the video installation exhibit "RagnarKjartansson: Song" is easy to miss at first. But it would be a shame to overlook this particular exhibition. Organized by ...
Performers from “Romantic Songs of the Patriarchy.” From left to right: Anna J Witiuk, Rose Stoller, Alex Koi, Miriam Elhajli, Katie Martucci, and Felice Rosser ...
San Francisco is getting a new organization dedicated to performance art. C Project, which will host site-specific events in a variety of nontraditional venues across the city, is the brainchild of ...
On paper, it sounded dreadful. An Icelandic artist would perform Franz Schubert's "An Die Musik" for four hours as part of his new exhibition, "Ragnar Kjartansson: Song," at the Institute of ...
The artist Ragnar Kjartansson has built his reputation around endurance works, and a Milanese church will host his latest: the same romantic tune repeated hour after hour, day after day, for a month.
The Vikings lived by a fearless code, embracing fate and glory in battle. Explore Ragnar’s legendary death song and other sagas that reveal the warrior mindset. Appeals court rejects Trump's emergency ...
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