Welcome to the seventeenth LungA art festival, located in the beautiful Seyðisfjörður. LungA aims to bring together people from all around the world for a week of creating, partying and spending time together in the beautiful natural surroundings of the fjord. One participant, Vigdís Perla, fittingly describes it as “a summer camp for grown-ups.”
Seyðisfjörður is about nine hours away from Reykjavík by car, and surrounded by high mountains. This creates a small and defined environment in which the festivalgoers spend their time. It has also been said that the mountains contain a crystal with a certain kind of power, which keeps bringing people back. Having spent only three days in this place, I believe this could be true. The town is colourful, lively, calm and beautiful. It also contains the best sushi place in Iceland, Norð Austur.
Everything
LungA is a weeklong festival with workshops, concerts, lectures, parties and other happenings. The festival ends with a final exhibition of the participants’ work throughout the week and a concert, which this year features Human Woman, GKR, and more. This year’s festival began with an opening ceremony on Sunday night, designed by a youth exchange programme held prior to the festival. Four different schools researched how we could create a socially sustainable society. Over the course of the week, seven workshops will cover everything from dance and painting to karaoke, and more. They serve to provide a creative outlet for the festival’s diverse and talented participants; the workshops are extremely popular and were sold out quickly.
Best friends
It is interesting to witness the festival progress, especially as people get to know each other quickly here. From the first day, beautiful friendships have been in the making. It might be the fresh air, the AMO crépes being served daily or the partying, but it seems that at LungA, everybody are best friends. It might also have to do with the collaborative nature of LungA: when participants work alongside one another, a friendship happens naturally, perhaps more so than at a music festival where one is not forced to interact with others. Despite a fully booked schedule and a busy week, festival goers make sure to spend the nights partying, dancing by the ocean or performing karaoke at Kaffi Lára. The 24-hour sunlight makes it feel as if the day is never over, in a very good way.
Aside from participants, there are also resident artists Cold Intimacy, Myrkraverk, Sýnódísk Trópík and STOP CGFC 2016, whose work is featured in an exhibition at the Old Liquor Store as part of the festival. The podcast ‘’Pottcast,’’ hosted by Jóhann Kristófer Stefánsson and Pálmi Freyr Hauksson, covers the festival with interviews and more and volunteers play a big part in keeping the festival up and running.
LungA consist of both a festival and a school, which was established in 2014. The school offers two programmes, in fall and spring. The primary difference between the semesters is in the amount of daylight and the weather conditions, though workshops vary depending upon the guest teachers presents (artists including Saga Sigurðardóttir, Gavin Morrison and Lotte Rose Kjær Skau will all be there soon). LungA school shares the festival’s values and ideals: “We encourage a person’s uniqueness,” they proclaim, “and support the students on their path towards a stronger sense of self, along with developing an understanding of the world we live in, and their ability to act in it. We do this through the language and practice of art and creativity.”
See you at LungA!
For more information on LungA art festival or LungA school, visit www.lunga.is.
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