June 10-13, 2019
We didn't have to walk very far in Reykjavik the day we got there to discover a vibrant street art scene. I love murals and other forms of outdoor art and am always on the lookout for them when we travel. There was street art aplenty in Reykjavik.
Reykjavik has benefited from a collaboration between Iceland Airwaves (an annual Reykjavik music festival) and Berlin's Urban Nation (a contemporary art museum). The two groups created the Wall Poetry Project to "encourage artistic and creative exchange far beyond the inside of a gallery or the recording studio." Some of the art in this post is a result of that encouragement.
The first mural I noticed was a few blocks from the Hillgrimmskirkja (the massive cathedral). It is signed "Ugly," which I assume is not a commentary on the work itself but a signature of the Ugly Brothers, Icelandic artists. Other than that, I know nothing about this black-and-white shocker. It is a little bizarre, with a horse either trampling a man or eating his arm, but then most street art is on the strange side:
Speaking of bizarre, as we were looking for our hotel, I noticed this lovely view of a devilish vampire with his fangs about to sink into the throat of a lovely young lass. When I realized that was OUR hotel it was painted on, the Alda Hotel, I wasn't sure if it was safe to sleep there:
Roy Lichtenstein + Stephenie Meyer's Twilight, right? The image was painted by a leading British street artist named "D*Face" in 2016. A caption below the image, written in Icelandic, translates as "I was worst to the one I loved the most." Creepy and hilarious at the same time.