In his work from the 80s Gunnar Örn (1946-2008) focused on nature and its connection to the Icelandic folk tradition. Örn's work of this period is meditative and filled with dream-like images recalling a distant, mythological past. With his deft brushwork and subtle use of color, Örn proves himself a master of figurative and spiritually charged painting. In the 1990s, Örn's work developed a more abstract and ethereal quality, in which such figures and spirits become partly hidden in the landscape and incorporated into stones and the air, perhaps referring to Icelandic medieval legend. Gunnar Örn lived in Kambur, Iceland, in close contact with the landscape and wildlife that inspired his work so strongly.
Gunnar Örn, one of Iceland's best-known artists, died on March 28, 2008. Örn represented his country at the Venice Biennale in 1989, and at the São Paulo Bienal in 1985. His works may be found in public collections worldwide, including the Guggenheim Museum, New York, The National Gallery of Iceland, Reykjavik, The Seibu Museum, Tokyo, The Moderna Museet and the National Gallery of Sweden, Stockholm. Gunnar Örn also had solo exhibitions at Moeller Fine Art, New York in 1985 and 1989.
1946 Born 2 December, Reykjavik
1963Moves to Copenhagen, where he continues to study the cello
1964 Turns to painting
1965Returns to Iceland, becomes a fisherman on the Icelandic South Coast and continues painting
1971 Travels to Paris
1973 Second stay in Copenhagen
1975 Returns to Iceland. Lives and paints in Reykjavik
1976Travels to Paris, Rome, London and Sweden
1985 Meets Edward Fry and Achim Moeller in Reykjavik. First New York exhibition, travels to New York, purchase of The Great Dream by The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Represented at Bienal in Saõ Paulo.
1986Moves to the countryside near Hella
1987 Travels to Japan, exhibition at Seibu Museum "Scandinavian Art, 19 Artists from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, Sweden." Gift to Seibu Museum by Nordic Council of Ministers of "A Word in an Ear"
1988Represented at XLIII Biennale di Venezia
1989Solo exhibition at Achim Moeller Fine Art, New York
2000/2004 Solo exhibitions at Stalke Galleri, Copenhagen
2008Dies on March 28. Hommage à Gunnar Örn, Art Basel 39, Moeller Fine Art
2009 Art Forum Berlin, Moeller Fine Art
Museums and Public Collections:
National Gallery of Iceland, Reykavik
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
The Seibu Museum, Tokyo
Moderna Museeet, Stockholm
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm