Jónas Jónsson and his Precepts for Icelandic Art

MLitt ritgerð við School of Art History við St. Andrews háskóla í Skotlandi In the first half of the 20th century attempts were made by political forces in Europe to utilize the visual arts to develop the nationalistic sentiments of the citizens of several countries. The most famous example of this...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Guðni Tómasson 1976-
Other Authors: Landsbókasafn Íslands
Format: Thesis
Language:Icelandic
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/20398
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author Guðni Tómasson 1976-
author2 Landsbókasafn Íslands
author_facet Guðni Tómasson 1976-
author_sort Guðni Tómasson 1976-
collection Skemman (Iceland)
description MLitt ritgerð við School of Art History við St. Andrews háskóla í Skotlandi In the first half of the 20th century attempts were made by political forces in Europe to utilize the visual arts to develop the nationalistic sentiments of the citizens of several countries. The most famous example of this is the German one, where the Nazi regime promoted certain artists while it suppressed and attacked others. Another example, and a lot less known internationally, were attempts made by Icelandic politician Jónas Jónsson to influence the artistic output of Icelandic artists in the beginning of the 1940s. These took place shortly before Iceland became fully independent from Danish rule. In addition to his writings on the subject, Jónsson also used methods similar to those in Germany of exhibiting works that he deemed “acceptable” and “unacceptable” in the output of several Icelandic visual artists. Although these exhibitions and the disputes that arose between Jónsson and a group of Icelandic artists were in part an answer to the criticism that the artists put forth against Jónsson and his Board of Education, they were mainly a struggle about the interrelations of art and politics. While artists under the influence of contemporary currents in the arts reacted harshly to Jónsson’s attempts to control their output, it was clear that the politician wanted to utilize the arts for a nationalistic cause in Icelandic society and he wanted the nation’s art to stand clear from foreign art movements that he saw as unfitting for Icelandic art. His ideas therefore touched on ideas about the ethnic purity of the Icelandic national identity, that cultural artefacts were meant to reflect. Ultimately the ideas of the isolation of Icelandic art from current developments in western art were unrealistic, as the country was developing closer ties to the outside world in the Second World War.
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spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/20398 2025-01-16T22:40:26+00:00 Jónas Jónsson and his Precepts for Icelandic Art Guðni Tómasson 1976- Landsbókasafn Íslands 2003-08 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/20398 is ice http://hdl.handle.net/1946/20398 Listasaga Jónas Jónsson 1885-1968 (frá Hriflu) Myndlist Listamannadeilan 1942 Menningardeilur Thesis 2003 ftskemman 2022-12-11T06:55:05Z MLitt ritgerð við School of Art History við St. Andrews háskóla í Skotlandi In the first half of the 20th century attempts were made by political forces in Europe to utilize the visual arts to develop the nationalistic sentiments of the citizens of several countries. The most famous example of this is the German one, where the Nazi regime promoted certain artists while it suppressed and attacked others. Another example, and a lot less known internationally, were attempts made by Icelandic politician Jónas Jónsson to influence the artistic output of Icelandic artists in the beginning of the 1940s. These took place shortly before Iceland became fully independent from Danish rule. In addition to his writings on the subject, Jónsson also used methods similar to those in Germany of exhibiting works that he deemed “acceptable” and “unacceptable” in the output of several Icelandic visual artists. Although these exhibitions and the disputes that arose between Jónsson and a group of Icelandic artists were in part an answer to the criticism that the artists put forth against Jónsson and his Board of Education, they were mainly a struggle about the interrelations of art and politics. While artists under the influence of contemporary currents in the arts reacted harshly to Jónsson’s attempts to control their output, it was clear that the politician wanted to utilize the arts for a nationalistic cause in Icelandic society and he wanted the nation’s art to stand clear from foreign art movements that he saw as unfitting for Icelandic art. His ideas therefore touched on ideas about the ethnic purity of the Icelandic national identity, that cultural artefacts were meant to reflect. Ultimately the ideas of the isolation of Icelandic art from current developments in western art were unrealistic, as the country was developing closer ties to the outside world in the Second World War. Thesis Iceland Skemman (Iceland)
spellingShingle Listasaga
Jónas Jónsson 1885-1968 (frá Hriflu)
Myndlist
Listamannadeilan 1942
Menningardeilur
Guðni Tómasson 1976-
Jónas Jónsson and his Precepts for Icelandic Art
title Jónas Jónsson and his Precepts for Icelandic Art
title_full Jónas Jónsson and his Precepts for Icelandic Art
title_fullStr Jónas Jónsson and his Precepts for Icelandic Art
title_full_unstemmed Jónas Jónsson and his Precepts for Icelandic Art
title_short Jónas Jónsson and his Precepts for Icelandic Art
title_sort jónas jónsson and his precepts for icelandic art
topic Listasaga
Jónas Jónsson 1885-1968 (frá Hriflu)
Myndlist
Listamannadeilan 1942
Menningardeilur
topic_facet Listasaga
Jónas Jónsson 1885-1968 (frá Hriflu)
Myndlist
Listamannadeilan 1942
Menningardeilur
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/20398