Island Zombie: Iceland Writings
By Roni Horn
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About this ebook
An evocative chronicle of the power of solitude in the natural world
I’m often asked, but have no idea why I chose Iceland, why I first started going, why I still go. In truth I believe Iceland chose me.—from the introduction
Contemporary artist Roni Horn first visited Iceland in 1975 at the age of nineteen, and since then, the island’s treeless expanse has had an enduring hold on Horn’s creative work. Through a series of remarkable and poetic reflections, vignettes, episodes, and illustrated essays, Island Zombie distills the artist’s lifelong experience of Iceland’s natural environment. Together, these pieces offer an unforgettable exploration of the indefinable and inescapable force of remote, elemental places, and provide a sustained look at how an island and its atmosphere can take possession of the innermost self.
Island Zombie is a meditation on being present. It vividly conveys Horn’s experiences, from the deeply profound to the joyful and absurd. Through powerful evocations of the changing weather and other natural phenomena—the violence of the wind, the often aggressive birds, the imposing influence of glaciers, and the ubiquitous presence of water in all its variety—we come to understand the author’s abiding need for Iceland, a place uniquely essential to Horn’s creative and spiritual life. The dramatic surroundings provoke examinations of self-sufficiency and isolation, and these ruminations summon a range of cultural companions, including El Greco, Emily Dickinson, Judy Garland, Wallace Stevens, Edgar Allan Poe, William Morris, and Rachel Carson. While brilliantly portraying nature’s sublime energy, Horn also confronts issues of consumption, destruction, and loss, as the industrial and man-made encroach on Icelandic wilderness.
Filled with musings on a secluded region that perpetually encourages a sense of discovery, Island Zombie illuminates a wild and beautiful Iceland that remains essential and new.
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Island Zombie - Roni Horn
ISLAND ZOMBIE
ISLAND ZOMBIE
ICELAND WRITINGS
RONI HORN
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS
PRINCETON AND OXFORD
Copyright © 2020 by Roni Horn
Weather Reports You originally published by Artangel/Steidl, London and Göttingen, Germany © 2007 Artangel/Steidl, and Roni Horn
Requests for permission to reproduce material from this work should be sent to [email protected]
Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540
In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 6 Oxford Street, Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1TR press.princeton.edu
Jacket illustration: No. 14, Iceland’s Difference, August 31, 2002, in Morgunblaðið.
Jacket design by Takaaki Matsumoto, Matsumoto Incorporated, NY
All Rights Reserved
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Horn, Roni, 1955- author.
Title: Island zombie : Iceland writings / Roni Horn.
Other titles: Morgunblađiđ.
Description: Princeton : Princeton University Press, [2020] | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2020002286 (print) | LCCN 2020002287 (ebook) | ISBN 9780691208145 (hardback) | ISBN 9780691208978 (ebook) | Version 1.0
Subjects: LCSH: Horn, Roni, 1955- | Iceland. Classification: LCC N6537.H644 A35 2020 (print) | LCC N6537.H644 (ebook) | DDC 709.2—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020002286 LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020002287
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available
Designed by Takaaki Matsumoto, Matsumoto Incorporated, NY
CONTENTS
Introduction
Island Zombie 1
Pooling Waters
Making Being Here Enough 11
Sometimes Dead 13
The Cold Blood of Iceland 15
Bluff and Psycho 17
How—Is Visible Here 19
Floating in the Desert 23
Accidents Are Mundane 25
Roads Lack Dedication 27
Little Showers 29
Falling Trees Make Sound 31
Verne’s Journey 33
The Probability of Round Rocks 35
Special Effects 37
Lóa and Lóa 39
Weather Is National Sport 41
Anatomy and Geography 43
Indoor Water 45
Pronouns Detain Me 47
Bluff Life 49
A Newark Here 53
Island and Labyrinth 55
Where the Earth Is Hot 57
Youth and Geometry 59
Sleep: Rotation Method 63
When Dickinson Shut Her Eyes 65
Pastoral and Cave 67
The Flats (After William Morris) 69
Crossing a Field I Remember 71
I Can’t See the Arctic Circle from Here 73
A Franchise of Rainbows 75
Wallace Stevens’s Ice 77
Collected
Hot Water Sampler 85
An Adhesive Feeling 89
A Mink Look 91
Mirror, Desert and Mirror 93
Monroe, Iceland 97
Throwing Itself Together 99
Something Shimmering 101
An Evening with Gelatinous and Glutinous 103
Cloth-Home Culture 105
The Other Here 107
Water and Clearing (Excerpt) 109
Conjecture a Cause: Seljavegur 2, Reykjavík 101, August 22, 2003 111
Notes on the Obsolescence of Islands 115
Eruption, Assassination (November 1963) 119
A White Stone 121
My Oz 125
Weather Reports You (Excerpt)
Introduction 135
Selection: 21 Reports 137
Morgunblaðið Newspaper
Note on Texts 180
The Nothing That Is 181
Notes on Icelandic Architecture (Excerpt) 187
One Hundred Waterfalls, Five Hundred Jobs 189
Iceland’s Difference 195
Colophon 246
ISLAND ZOMBIE
1
My first venture abroad was Iceland. It was 1975 and I was nineteen. My memory of the trip is dominated by weather. The sky, the wind, and the light all made a strong impression. Weather simply hadn’t occurred to me before then.
In 1978 I received a grant from graduate school. I used it to return to Iceland the following year. For six months I roamed the island. With a dirt bike modified for long distance travel, I was portable; I lived in a tent furnished with candles, sleeping bag, and cook stove, pitching camp wherever I tired.
It was a solitary journey. The roads were unpaved. The bike was well suited; with no limits on access, I went everywhere. The distinction between public and private hardly existed then, and never restricted direction. Anywhere was possible.
Except for short interludes, I was outside 24/7, exposed to the inclement weather, the riotous force of the wind, and the loud whining of the two-stroke engine. The roads, not fit for distance, made travel demanding and slow. That spring and summer, the seasons of my journey, were claimed as the coldest and wettest in the island’s recorded meteorological history. With no grading the dirt roads hugged the natural contour of the landscape. The local ups and downs greatly slowed horizontal progress. With distance attenuated in this manner, arrival lingered endlessly off in the distance.
I returned to Iceland with migratory insistence and regularity. The necessity of it was part of me. Iceland was the only place I went without cause, just to be there.
Early on I imagined compiling an inventory of rocks and geologic debris. Each rock was that compelling. Travel was crowded with attention-grabbing views and weird organic formations. To date there is no inventory, only the dream, though I remember them. I remember the rocks.
In 1982 the national chief of lighthouse keepers gave me permission to stay in a lighthouse off the southern coast. For six weeks I lived up on the bluff at Dyrhólaey. The building, from the early part of the twentieth century, included living quarters. But when the light was automated the lighthouse went uninhabited for decades.
I arrived in early May. And since I wasn’t going anywhere, it soon began to feel like an act of submergence—going deep but not going far. Staying put among local change was travel. The bluff was action packed. It was a matter of attention. Between the water and the light, the birdsong and the wind, the rocks and the weather. Between the sand and the seals and the eider and the puffin, I was busy.
In the mid-1980s I began work on To Place: a series of books—an encyclopedia of sorts, based in what would become a lifelong relationship to the island. The first volume, Bluff Life, was published in 1990. Currently it is ten volumes deep.* I’m not anticipating an end to it since I’ve discovered, paradoxically, that To Place becomes less complete with each new volume.
By the early 1990s Iceland had become quarry and source. At times travel seemed closer to hunting or mining. Extraction, I thought, was the basic act. The drawings, sculpture, and photographic work I was producing at the time† integrated the presence of the island and the experience it offered. But as I view the dynamic now, the reality was quite different: Iceland was a force, a force that had taken possession of me.
2
I recall the first image I associated with Iceland from childhood. It was that of a horizonless ocean at the center of the earth. I knew it was Iceland because Jules Verne had decided, discovered, or determined that the entrance to the center of the earth was located there. With all the years and all my travels, the truth of this insight has only deepened.
I’m often asked but have no idea why I chose Iceland, why I first started going, why I still go. In truth I believe Iceland chose me:
The island.
The ocean surround.
The going north.
The light.
The emptiness.
The full-up vacancy.
The wholeness.
The absence of parts.
The wholeness of something entire.
The completeness of something whole.
The frequency of white.
The whiteness of white.
The open space.
The nothing of open space.
The accumulation of nothing.
The nothing plus nothing that is still nothing.
The nothing plus nothing that is still transparent.
The horizon.
The horizon that always exaggerates the proximity of the horizon.‡
The possibility of infinity.
The visibility of infinity.
The visibility of the weather.
The visibility of other worlds.
The sense of seeing beyond sight.
The plain circumstance.
The now.
The perpetual now.
The unsuspendable now.
The no-other-than-now.
The treelessness.
The treelessness that provokes no desire for trees.
The views.
The views in the scale of the planet.
The openness.
The continuity.
The fool-me-endlessness.
The being faraway.
The feeling of being surrounded by faraway.
The sense of place.
The palpable sense of place.
The with-my-eyes-closed-sense of place.
The possibility of being present.
The sense of being present.
The being present.
The unsolicited awareness.
The ineluctable awareness.
The sheer awareness.
The solitude.
The solitude of distance.
The solitude of only.
The solitude of no way back.
The cool air.
The cold air.
The nothing but air air.
The air that is spirit not thing.
The wild, wild air.
The largeness of the moon.
The closeness of celestial bodies.
The light from non-terrestrial sources.
The shadows.
The darkness of shade.
The darkness of light withdrawn.
The black earth.
The black sand and the black ash and the black rocks.
The pink pumice.
The unnatural looking natural red earth.
The rocks.
The rocks shaped to platonic stardom.
The rocks in their organic ambiguity.
The basalt everywhere.
The basalt with its liquid past.
The basalt: cool and cracked, and whole even when in pieces.
The erratics.
The always solitary erratics.
The desert.
The unbroken emptiness of the desert.
The not nothing of the desert.
The absence of threat.
The absence of threat.
The mystery.
The mystery that is chaperone.
The mystery that accompanies the light: dark and bright.
The wind.
The delicacy and violence of the wind.
The indifference of the wind.
The stillness when it is still.
The silence when it is still.
The weather that is wildlife.
The weather.
The weather—sublime and dangerous, wild and unknowable.
The simplicity.
The clarity.
The youth.
The chance.
The opportunity.
The desire.
The absence of the hidden.
The absence of secrets?
The feeling of the absence of secrets.
The unused.
The unoccupied.
The uninhabited.
The absence of hierarchy.
The transparence of time and space.
The transparence of place.
The crazy infant geology.
The unworn and the broken and the always complete geology.
The self-evident geology.
The water.
The water.
The water.
•
Q.—What is a soul possessed by isolated insentient forces?
A.—An island zombie?
(2020)
* Vol. 2: Folds (1991); Vol. 3: Lava (1992); Vol. 4: Pooling Waters (1994); Vol. 5: Verne’s Journey (1995); Vol. 6: Haraldsdóttir (1996); Vol. 7: Arctic Circles (1998); Vol. 8: Becoming a Landscape (2001); Vol. 9: Doubt Box (2006); Vol. 10: Haraldsdóttir, Part Two (2011).
† The photographic installations: You Are the Weather (1994); Dead Owl (1997); bird (1998–2008); Pi (1998); Becoming a Landscape (1999–2001); Her, Her, Her, and Her (2002); Doubt by Water (2003); Herdubreid at Home (2007); You Are the Weather, Part 2 (2010); Mother, Wonder (2012/19).
‡ Paraphrase of Edmond Jabès.
POOLING WATERS
(1990–91)
MAKING BEING HERE ENOUGH
I don’t want to read. I don’t want to write. I don’t want to do anything but be here. Doing something will take me away from being here. I want to make being here enough. Maybe it’s already enough. I won’t have to invent enough. I’ll be here and I won’t do anything and this place will be here, and I won’t do anything to it. And maybe because I’m here and because the me in what’s here makes what’s here different, maybe that will be enough, maybe that will be what I’m after.
But I’m not sure. I’m not sure I’ll be able to perceive the difference. How will I perceive it? I need to find a way to make myself absolutely not here but still be able to be here to know the difference. I need to experience the difference between being here and not changing here, and being here and changing here.
I set up camp early for the night. It’s a beautiful, unlikely evening after a long rainy day. I put my tent down in an El Greco landscape: the velvet greens, the mottled purples, the rocky stubble.
But El Greco changes here, he makes being here not enough. I am here and I can’t be here without El Greco. I just can’t leave here alone.
SOMETIMES DEAD
A sunny blue morning and I’m looking for a place to rest. On the map there’s a beach not far ahead. I leave the road and drive across a grassy field and soon I’m on a red-sand beach. The tide is out, the ocean far away. I get off the bike and wander down the shore. It’s windy and cold, but the sun is warm in a cloudless sky. The arctic terns are about, they screech and hover and swoop down at my head.
I lie down on the sand; near the earth the wind is still. I fall into a deep, brief sleep. Through my eyelids the bright light of the sun saturates my body. As though from outside, I see myself translucent and feathered red to orange at the edges of my silhouette, a science fiction. I dream of my body inanimate, prone, giving up its opacity.
As I wake I feel a weight on my chest. And there, as my eyes slowly open, is a large brown bird perched on my stomach. It casts a shadow over my face. I lift my head as the bird takes a peck at my chest and wonder is this in life or in death? I panic and the bird spreads its wings, digging its perch in a little deeper as it takes off.
THE COLD BLOOD OF ICELAND
There are no reptiles