Snæfellsnes Broadcast Station — live streaming video art
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Live Streaming Video Art · Snæfellsnes, Iceland

Snæfellsnes
Broadcast Station

June 2020

In Snæfellsnes Broadcast Station, Haraldur Karlsson reports live from Snæfellsnes — the artist playfully presents the surrounding landscape in which he has created a simple set up of a wooden chair. A child occasionally shares the screen, waving to observers.

Interspersed with the landscape scenes and the overlay of different video warping effects are weather maps of the Snæfellsnes peninsula with dramatic overlays of fire-spitting and tornadoes swirling. The work is seemingly a commentary on the role of the Snæfellsnes peninsula in local lore: it is the place where Jules Verne begins his 1871 science fiction classic Journey to the Center of the Earth, with entering a dormant volcano. The peninsula is also known for its heavy mythology of elven lore and Hidden People — lore now absorbed into every marketing campaign introducing tourists to the area.

In a panel talk, Fritz Hendrik Berndsen discusses the way in which Icelandic art history is full of landscape paintings created before the digital marketing of Iceland to tourists began — but it's also where it began, because Icelandic painters did not appreciate the value of the landscape before Danish poets began writing about its majesty. In Snæfellsnes Broadcast Station, Haraldur portrays a landscape being consumed by the digital — not only on a consumer level, but as part of surveillance culture.

"The Icelandic landscape has a completely different meaning after Google Earth appears because now, you're not alone in nature — there's always a satellite above you."

— Geirþrúður, panel discussion

In the context of Haraldur's previous work with themes of expressing a holistic philosophy of science and art — in which art reflects reality in its relation to man — the artist is the anti-hero, using the medium to be more human. There's always a Google Earth satellite even in the most isolated landscapes, making the world more known, and giving with it a human angle permeated with the factors of being human: seeing it, as Haraldur does with video editing software, through the historical prism of science and philosophy.

Essay by Erin Honeycutt

Medium Live streaming video, real-time processing, weather data overlay
Year June 2020
Thread Data → Element — landscape as data, surveillance and perception