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Fritz Agency
Christian Dittus
Original language
English

ISLAND ZOMBIE

Roni Horn

Iceland Writings

An evocative chronicle of the power of solitude in the natural world

Contemporary artist Roni Horn first visited Iceland in 1975 at the age of nineteen, and since then, the island's treeless expanse has had an enduring hold on Horn's creative work. Through a series of remarkable and poetic reflections, vignettes, episodes, and illustrated essays, Island Zombie distills the artist's lifelong experience of Iceland's natural environment. Together, these pieces offer an unforgettable exploration of the indefinable and inescapable force of remote, elemental places, and provide a sustained look at how an island and its atmosphere can take possession of the innermost self.

Island Zombie is a meditation on being present. It vividly conveys Horn's experiences, from the deeply profound to the joyful and absurd. Through powerful evocations of the changing weather and other natural phenomena—the violence of the wind, the often aggressive birds, the imposing influence of glaciers, and the ubiquitous presence of water in all its variety—we come to understand the author's abiding need for Iceland, a place uniquely essential to Horn's creative and spiritual life. The dramatic surroundings provoke examinations of self-sufficiency and isolation, and these ruminations summon a range of cultural companions, including El Greco, Emily Dickinson, Judy Garland, Wallace Stevens, Edgar Allan Poe, William Morris, and Rachel Carson. While brilliantly portraying nature's sublime energy, Horn also confronts issues of consumption, destruction, and loss, as the industrial and man-made encroach on Icelandic wilderness.

Filled with musings on a secluded region that perpetually encourages a sense of discovery, Island Zombie illuminates a wild and beautiful Iceland that remains essential and new.

Roni Horn is an artist and writer whose books include Another Water, Wonderwater (Alice Offshore), Weather Reports You, and Roni Horn aka Roni Horn.
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Published 2020-10-01 by Princeton University Press

Comments

"Island Zombie is an intoxicating artist’s journal and a work of art itself. We feel, through Roni Horn’s carefully rendered words and photographs, the delight of discovering ‘nowhere.’ Yet, Horn offers a provocative and heartbreaking question: ‘Is nowhere gone?’ At a time when many of us have come to understand the price of overusing and wrongly altering the earth’s resources, this is a powerful manifesto."

—Anna Deavere Smith, author of Letters to a Young Artist


"Roni Horn’s Island Zombie depicts, with laser-like clarity, the complex and profound experience of being human in a vast, fabulous, and unforgiving natural world. It’s a remarkable accomplishment."

—Michael Cunningham, author of The Hours


"Roni Horn’s Iceland is part landscape, part lover. Scrambling over pewter shale and purple moss, sleeping so still she becomes a branch for a bird, Horn records her tectonic relationship with a strange volcanic island that is simultaneously other and self."

—Jeanette Winterson, author of Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit


"An astounding act of meditation and a guidebook back to our senses, Roni Horn’s Island Zombie rides the changeability of the life of a place with solitude at its center. This remarkable achievement is a gift to life, a gift of a life, a gift of life."

—Claudia Rankine, author of Citizen: An American Lyric


“In these days of global disharmony, Roni Horn reminds us of the connection between us all: the weather. Horn never misses a word, no matter how big or small. She takes us to the edge of nowhere and fills it with content.”

—Nan Goldin, artist


"There is an Icelandic saying: ‘A guest’s eye is a sharp eye.’ Roni Horn is an artist who has defined Iceland for me. Few know the country as well as Horn does and her work has taught me how to look at and feel this place."

—Ragnar Kjartansson, artist


“Island Zombie engagingly tracks Roni Horn’s struggle to be present and to see—really see—the nuances of the Icelandic landscape. The artist is attentive and observant, and as a result, these pieces evoke solitude in nature as a joy and respite.”

—Eva Heisler, author of Reading Emily Dickinson in Icelandic


"Roni Horn’s brilliant and timely book is a must-read for all who have followed the career of this stellar American artist. Island Zombie is concerned with the temporality of landscape, the agency of the nonhuman world, and the mutual constitution of subjects and places. It will interest anyone concerned with the philosophical and aesthetic aspects of the Anthropocene.”

—Johanne Sloan, author of Joyce Wieland’s “The Far Shore”