Tuesday, February 22, 2011

ishøj and køge

On the first Sunday of every month the S-tog trains in Copenhagen are free! So on the first Sunday of February, a group of us exchange students organised to go to the Arken Museum of Modern Art in Ishøj and then if we had time, on to the end of the line and Køge.
It took about 20 minutes to get to our first stop and then we walked for about an hour to get to the museum from the train. Luckily it was a pretty nice day - a bit overcast but not really freezing - so this was tolerable. The Arken Museum was pretty amazing. The building itself was pretty impressive and it also was home to an interesting collection of Modern art installations.
The highlights for me were the Olafur Eliasson piece called Din Bline Passager (Your Blind Passanger) which was a long tunnel filled with smoke and coloured light making it almost impossible to see more than a metre in front of you. It really was a surreal experience. I wasn't too keen on it at the time, but I think the artist was somewhat successful in creating a space that challenges the concept of shared and personal space.


Other highlights of the museum were a wall covered in photos of landscapes, some butterflies that represented social issues and some Damien Hirst pieces that were quite humorous - posters of food packagings made to look like prescription medicines. 


There is also a beach at Ishøj which was ok but not that nice - the weather was pretty crappy I'll admit, but it was quite small and quite close to an industrial area so the view wasn't that great either. We stopped here for only a couple of minutes before heading back to the station and onto Køge which was a pretty little seaside town. Apparently it was once know for witch-burning, but we weren't there long enough to see any evidence of that. We were also there late on a Sunday afternoon, so not much was open and there weren't that many people about. We did manage to find a kebab place and a pub that were open for some refreshments and to warm up before heading back to Copenhagen.

ny carlsberg glyptotek

This museum was originally established to house the art collection of Carl Jacobsen who was the son of the founder of Carlsberg Breweries. It's primarily a sculpture museum (that's what 'glyptotek' means according to my friend Wikipedia) but has quite a bit of French Impressionist and Danish Golden-Age paintings.
There was a large collection of Rodin sculptures as well as some bronze sculptures by Degas which were very interesting. But the collections that interested me the most here were the Ancients - especially Egypt and Greece.
I've never really had much time for Egyptian art, I think because it's one of the first things you learn about in art classes at school at an age when it's just not cool to care about some old Pharaohs and what they were doing 3000 years ago. But here, I discovered a new-found appreciation for the way that the Egyptians worked and the influences it has had on Modern art and design. The attention to detail but spare decoration really resonates with the Modernist ideologies of form follows function and showing off materials to their greatest advantage.


The ancient Greek collection I also found to be quite entertaining and funny in parts. I think I may have only been so amused because I was still jet-lagged at the point in time and was by myself at the museum so I had to entertain myself somehow. But I found a young Greek boy with a monobrow:

and a collection of spare noses and ears:

 The foyer of the museum itself is quite spectacular with an indoor garden and apparently a very good and reputable restaurant serving traditional Danish cuisine. I didn't eat here because unfortunately it was a bit pricey for my student budget, but it did smell pretty good. There was also a pretty weird statue in the garden that didn't seem to have any relationship to anything else in the museum, and no explanation as to who did it or what it was all about.


lazy + busy = neglected blog

Well, I've been here for almost 4 weeks now and the time has gone by so quickly! I've been keeping busy with uni work, site seeing around town and socialising with other exchange students.
So first things first, one of the first places I visited when I arrived was the National Museum. I would recommend this to anyone visiting Copenhagen as a pretty good introduction into Danish Prehistory as well as other things like the Middle Ages and Renaissance, but the prehistoric exhibition was what I found the most interesting. Stone Age fashions, Bronze Age and Renaissance jewellery and hand-crafted objects and Viking runes were the highlights of the museum for me.


There was also a display of toys and Danish modern history that had some interesting examples of Danish Modernist and Art Deco poster designs and Modern furniture. In the toy display there was also an incredible room of elaborate doll-houses which were lit and could be viewed from both sides to show off how they were furnished and decorated. It made me want to be a little girl again so I could play with these amazing houses!