On view at Laguna Gloria
Ragnar Kjartansson, S.S. Hangover, 2013
Boat, captain, brass instruments, and musicians
Music by Kjartan Sveinsson
Featuring musicians from Density512, Austin’s contemporary chamber orchestra collective
Performance: 4 hours
Courtesy the artist; Luhring Augustine, New York; and i8 Gallery, Reykjavik
Performances on select weekend dates: April 7, 8, 14, 15, and 28, and May 5 and 6, from 11A–3P. A sunset performance on Sunday, April 22, from 4–8P, is presented in partnership with the Fusebox Festival.
The S.S. Hangover sculpture will be docked and visible from the shores of Laguna Gloria from May 7 through June 3.
See the Video: S.S. Hangover at Laguna Gloria
Full Score featuring Density512
Listen on Soundcloud: Interview with Ragnar Kjartansson
Artist Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover, 2013, consists of a hand-painted boat sailing on the lagoon, occupied by a formal party of six brass musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson. As if caught in a daydream, the S.S. Hangover sails in circles, transporting its occupants to nowhere. The black-tie-clad performers repeatedly play a lyrical score for hours that challenges their endurance while flirting with the potential for failure as time passes. Inspired by a set prop from the 1935 American film Remember Last Night?, a drunken comedy murder-mystery, Kjartansson (Icelandic, born 1976 in Reykjavik) restored a vintage Icelandic wooden fishing boat to its likeness. The artist previously enacted a version of this playfully romantic performance at the 55th Venice Biennale, where musicians seemed to have left a party in a beautiful hybrid Scandinavian-Venetian-Grecian boat, replete with a sail featuring a mythical and overly plump Pegasus.
The artist’s multidisciplinary practice is in itself a hybrid. Having first trained as a painter, Kjartansson now works primarily in film, video, and performance, and is as likely to bring musicians, actors, and theater sets into galleries as to perform himself for the camera. S.S. Hangover, like much of his theatrical live and video works, charts a trajectory back to the artist’s youth backstage watching his parents’ repetitive rehearsals and plays in Reykjavik theaters, where his father was a director and his mother an actor.
The durational aspect of the languidly circling boat, with its looping score by his long-time collaborator, composer Kjartan Sveinsson, is an expression of Kjartansson’s desire for what he wittily refers to as “divine boredom.” Contemporary art that addresses duration and endurance harks back to the 1970s, when artists including Marina Abramović, Vito Acconci, Chris Burden, and Carolee Schneemann enacted projects that challenged the artist, performers, and sometimes spectators both mentally and physically. As not only a dedicated music fan but a musical showman, Kjartansson has collaborated with a broad range of musicians, including the National, the Vienna Boys’ Choir, Pinetop Perkins, Kristín Anna, and Orchestre Métropolitain. The delightful and absurd performative sculpture S.S. Hangover plays with notions of irony and sincerity, artifice and authenticity, and fantasy and reality, putting forth the idea of existential humor as a commentary on the human condition.
Featuring Density512 musicians:
Flugelhorn: Chelsea Orr, Chris Luebke-Brown, Casey Martin, Melissa Munoz, Rachel Spencer
French Horn: Ben Carroll, Ryan Licalsi, Zach Morgan, Jacob Schnitzer, Stone Wang
Trombone: Manny Arredondo, Luke Berringer, Tim Maines, Tyler Smolovik
Tuba: Alex Avila, John Flores, Aaron Morgan
Organized by Andrea Mellard, Director of Public Programs and Community Engagement, with text also by Mellard.
Special thanks to Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York, and i8 Gallery, Reykjavik.
Ragnar Kjartansson Exhibition Support: Edward and Betty Marcus Foundation, Revelator, Vision Fund Leaders and Contributors
Video by Revelator Productions, Austin, Texas.
Music by Kjartan Sveinsson. Video by Revelator Productions, Austin, Texas.
Video by Revelator Productions, Austin, Texas.
Icelandic artist Ragnar Kjartansson discusses his kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover with The Contemporary Austin's Andrea Mellard, Director of Public Programs and Community Engagement. Interview recorded March 2018 for Fusebox Festival's blog Written & Spoken, also with Anna Gallagher-Ross, curator for Fusebox Festival.
A hand-painted boat languidly sails on the Laguna Gloria lagoon, occupied by a group of musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson, in this performance of Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover.
A hand-painted boat languidly sails on the Laguna Gloria lagoon, occupied by a group of musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson, in this performance of Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover.
A hand-painted boat languidly sails on the Laguna Gloria lagoon, occupied by a group of musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson, in this performance of Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover.
Oh, buoy! You won’t want to miss this nautical performance happening in the lagoon: a real live boat will be circling our shores! Take in the watery music, then make your own seafaring vessel to take home.
A hand-painted boat languidly sails on the Laguna Gloria lagoon, occupied by a group of musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson, in this performance of Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover.
Join us for a special sunset performance of Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover, as a hand-painted boat languidly sails on the lagoon, occupied by a group of musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson.
A hand-painted boat languidly sails on the Laguna Gloria lagoon, occupied by a group of musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson, in this performance of Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover.
A hand-painted boat languidly sails on the Laguna Gloria lagoon, occupied by a group of musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson, in this performance of Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover.
A hand-painted boat languidly sails on the Laguna Gloria lagoon, occupied by a group of musicians performing ethereal music by Kjartan Sveinsson, in this performance of Ragnar Kjartansson’s kinetic sound sculpture S.S. Hangover.