Fiann Paul is a Polish-born Icelandic explorer, endurance athlete, artist, and Jungian psychoanalyst renowned for his pioneering feats in ocean rowing, including becoming the first person to row across all five oceans and achieving the Ocean Explorers Grand Slam.[1][2] He has broken over 40 Guinness World Records in geographical explorations, more than any other explorer, with notable achievements such as the fastest crossings of the North Atlantic, Indian Ocean, and Mid-Pacific Ocean.[3][4]Paul's rowing career began with a team crossing of the Atlantic Ocean from east to west in 2011 aboard the Sara G, marking the start of his record-setting expeditions.[5] Subsequent voyages included the Indian Ocean in 2014, the Mid-Pacific in 2016, and the Arctic Ocean in 2017, where he simultaneously held speed records on four different oceans—a feat unmatched by any other rower.[6] In 2019, he captained the Impossible Row team, achieving the first unassisted row across the Drake Passage from Antarctica to South Georgia, setting additional records for the Southern Ocean.[7] These expeditions highlight his role in advancing human-powered ocean exploration, often under extreme conditions like polar open waters and high seas.[8]Beyond exploration, Paul is a Zürich-trained Jungian psychoanalyst who integrates depth psychology into his public speaking and personal reflections on endurance and the human psyche.[9] He holds four academic degrees, including in architecture and geography, and pursues artistry through photography and animations focused on oceanconservation.[3][10] As a modern Renaissance figure, Paul has lived on every continent and uses his experiences to advocate for environmental awareness and psychological resilience.[3]
Early life and background
Childhood and family origins
Fiann Paul was born Paweł Pietrzak on August 15, 1980, in Warsaw, Poland. In his childhood, Paul connected more with nature than with people, finding excitement in its dynamic elements like waves, which foreshadowed his later exploratory pursuits.[11]Of Polish heritage, he later acquired Icelandic citizenship following his relocation to Iceland in the mid-2000s.[1]
Move to Iceland and initial interests
In 2006, at the age of 26, Fiann Paul relocated from Poland to Iceland, where he eventually acquired Icelandic citizenship and adopted his current name.[1][3]Upon settling in Reykjavik, Iceland's capital, Paul began integrating into the local culture through his pursuits in art and photography, which quickly gained recognition within the creative community. By 2008, he collaborated with Polish artist Anna Leoniak on a project photographing around 1,000 Icelandic children in various locations across the country, with the images displayed in the city center to celebrate local youth.[12] This work marked his early engagement with Icelandic society, blending his artistic background with themes of community and environment.[1]Paul's interests soon expanded to outdoor activities, serving as precursors to more extreme explorations. In 2011, he toured Iceland with an outdoor art exhibition, utilizing platforms like Couchsurfing for accommodations while showcasing his photography in natural settings, which deepened his connection to the island's rugged landscapes and adventure-oriented culture.[13] These endeavors introduced him to Iceland's vibrant adventure communities, where he began participating in activities that emphasized physical challenges and environmental immersion.[3]
Education and early career
Academic qualifications
Fiann Paul began his formal education with training as an architect, culminating in a Master of Arts degree in Architecture from the Iceland Academy of the Arts.[14] This foundational qualification equipped him with skills in design and spatial thinking, influenced by his early artistic interests developed after moving to Iceland.[3]In addition to architecture, Paul pursued advanced studies across multiple disciplines, accumulating four academic degrees that reflect his interdisciplinary approach to knowledge.[3] His degrees include a Master of Arts in Architecture, a degree in geography, and postgraduate work in depth psychology, where he explored the analytical frameworks of the human psyche, building on his interest in inner exploration and environmental themes through relevant coursework.[15]Paul completed his training as a Jungian psychoanalyst at the C.G. Jung Institute in Zürich in 2021, earning a Diploma in Analytical Psychology.[9][16] This rigorous five-year program involved intensive studies in Jungian theory, clinical practice, and symbolic interpretation, with a focus on integrating psychological insights with broader human experiences.[14]
Architectural and artistic pursuits
Prior to his ocean rowing endeavors, Fiann Paul established a professional career in architecture in Iceland, leveraging his Master's degree in the field to contribute to the country's built environment.[9][17]Alongside architecture, Paul developed a renowned practice as a photographer and visual artist, with much of his portfolio created before 2012 and centered on themes of human intimacy, nature, and remote landscapes. His works often drew from Iceland's rugged terrain, blending artistic expression with an emerging exploratory ethos that emphasized connection to the natural world.[18][19]One seminal project, "Dialog" (2008), involved collaborative photography and installations capturing rural Icelandic children, highlighting themes of innocence and cultural heritage in isolated communities; it was featured in Icelandic media and screened as a short film at events like the Green Light Festival.[20][21][22]In 2009, Paul held an exhibition in the Faroe Islands, showcasing photographic works that explored regional identities and natural surroundings, as covered in local television broadcasts.[23]His 2011 "See It" project further exemplified this intersection, featuring intimate portraits of breastfeeding mothers taken in Iceland's remote areas and installed as a public artwork to celebrate primal bonds with nature and the body; the initiative received attention from Icelandic TV2 News for promoting awareness of natural human experiences.[24][19]These artistic endeavors, rooted in Iceland's wilderness and human-nature dialogues, laid the groundwork for Paul's later adventures by fostering a mindset of immersion in untamed environments and cultural depth.[25][26]
Ocean rowing career
Debut and Atlantic crossings (2011–2014)
Fiann Paul entered the world of ocean rowing in 2011 as the stroke for a six-man crew aboard the Sara G, departing from the Canary Islands on January 6 and arriving in Port St. Charles, Barbados, on February 8 after a 33-day voyage covering approximately 2,900 nautical miles. This east-to-west Atlantic crossing established new speed benchmarks for the route, propelled by consistent trade winds that allowed the team to maintain high daily averages despite the relentless demands of two-hour rowing shifts and sleep deprivation.[27][28]The expedition tested the crew's navigation skills amid variable weather patterns, including occasional squalls that required precise adjustments to sails and oars to avoid broaching, while the isolation of the open ocean amplified physical and mental strains such as saltwater sores and constant vigilance for shipping traffic. Paul's role in coordinating strokes contributed to the boat's efficiency, marking his initial foray into unsupported human-powered ocean traversal without external resupply.[29]In 2014, Paul captained a seven-man team on the 13-meter boat Avalon for an east-to-west Indian Ocean crossing, setting out from Geraldton, Western Australia, on June 11 and reaching the Seychelles on August 7 after 57 days and 11 hours, spanning 4,473 miles. This journey set pace records for the Indian Ocean while enduring extreme conditions, including three capsizes triggered by a hurricane-force storm with winds exceeding 50 knots, which damaged equipment and oars.[30][31]Navigation challenges were compounded by a mid-voyage course deviation to evade pirate activity in the western Indian Ocean, rerouting from the original Mauritius target northward to the Seychelles, alongside encounters such as a whale collision that dented the hull and a near-miss with an oil tanker in poor visibility. The crew managed these hazards through satellite communication for weather updates and manual celestial navigation, highlighting Paul's growing expertise in high-risk maritime expeditions.[30]By the end of 2014, Paul's accomplishments across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans represented a cumulative milestone of over 7,000 miles rowed in team efforts, solidifying his transition from architectural pursuits to elite ocean exploration.[32]
Pacific and Indian Ocean achievements (2016)
In 2016, Fiann Paul captained the Uniting Nations team in the Great Pacific Race, embarking on a challenging row across the North Pacific Ocean from Monterey, California, to Oahu, Hawaii—a distance of approximately 2,400 nautical miles. The four-man crew, comprising Paul (Iceland), Carlo Facchino (United States), Cyril Derreumaux (France), and Thiago Silva (Brazil), departed on June 5 and completed the unsupported, nonstop journey in 39 days, 9 hours, and 56 minutes, shattering the previous record of 43 days, 5 hours, and 30 minutes set in 2014. This marked the fastest team crossing in the east-to-west direction and the first such record under race conditions for that route.[6][33]The expedition utilized the ocean rowing boat Danielle, a 23-foot fiberglass vessel designed for endurance with self-righting capabilities, watertight compartments, and solar-powered desalinationsystems to handle the Pacific's variable conditions, including strong trade winds, large swells up to 20 feet, and equatorial currents that can exceed 2 knots. Adaptations included reinforced oarlocks for sustained high-output rowing in 90-minute shifts and provisions for over 40 days of self-sufficiency, emphasizing minimal external support to qualify as unsupported. The crew rowed in a rotational Viking-style system, covering an average of 80 miles per day despite encounters with storms and equipment strain, such as broken oars.[34][35]Paul's motivation stemmed from his ambition to pioneer human-powered ocean exploration, building on his prior Atlantic (2011) and Indian Ocean (2014) crossings to achieve the unprecedented feat of rowing all three major oceans. Intensive pre-race training involved months of ergometer sessions simulating 12-14 hours of daily rowing, strength conditioning for core and upper body endurance, and team-building simulations in simulated rough seas off Iceland to foster synchronization. This Pacific success on July 14, 2016, established Paul as the first individual to hold simultaneous overall speed records across the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans, solidifying his status as a trailblazer in the sport at age 35.[36][1]
Arctic Ocean expeditions (2017)
In 2017, Fiann Paul led the Polar Row expedition, a pioneering human-powered rowing venture across the Arctic Ocean open waters, marking his entry into polar exploration. The expedition commenced on July 20 from Tromsø, Norway, with a team of five rowers—Paul (Iceland), Carlo Facchino (USA), Danny Longman (UK), Tathagata Roy (India), and Tor Wigum (Norway)—aboard a 7.5-meter ocean rowing boat equipped for unsupported travel. The initial leg covered approximately 600 nautical miles north through the Barents Sea to Longyearbyen, Svalbard, completed in nine days at an average speed that set multiple records. A crew rotation followed, with Alex Gregory, Sam Vye, and Tyler Carnevale joining for the second leg southward toward Nuuk, Greenland, but severe weather forced the team to shelter on Bear Island after an additional 10 days, totaling 19 days at sea and about 1,280 miles rowed.[37][38]The journey confronted extreme Arctic conditions, including sub-zero temperatures dipping to -5°C (23°F), relentless rain and fog that left the crew perpetually soaked, and encounters with shifting ice shelves that demanded vigilant navigation. Wildlife threats, particularly polar bears, necessitated constant vigilance and the use of flares and acoustic deterrents, as the remote waters amplified risks from hypothermia and equipment failure. Solar-powered systems for GPS and communication proved unreliable under prolonged cloud cover, underscoring the expedition's reliance on human endurance in one of the planet's most unforgiving environments.[39][40]Planning for the Polar Row emphasized minimal environmental impact, with the all-human-powered vessel designed to produce zero emissions and demonstrate sustainable exploration in climate-vulnerable polar regions; Paul selected the route to highlight the effects of melting sea ice on navigation while avoiding motorized support to preserve the purity of the challenge. The team underwent rigorous preparation, including simulations for 90-minute rowing shifts in freezing conditions, and collaborated with meteorological experts to time the voyage during a narrow summer window of relatively open water. Illness among crew members, exacerbated by the harsh weather, ultimately halted the full traverse, yet the effort yielded 11 Guinness World Records, including the northernmost latitude reached by a rowboat and the fastest crossing of Arctic open waters.[37][41]This expedition completed Paul's crossings of the Atlantic (2011), Indian (2014), and Pacific (2016) Oceans, making him the first person to row across all four major oceans—a milestone verified upon reaching Longyearbyen on July 30. The Polar Row not only advanced ocean rowing into polar domains but also established benchmarks for speed and resilience in extreme latitudes, influencing subsequent unsupported polar attempts.[5][42]
Southern Ocean milestones (2019–2023)
In December 2019, Fiann Paul led a team of five fellow adventurers, including polar explorer Colin O'Brady, on the "Impossible Row," the first fully human-powered crossing of the Drake Passage. Departing from Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, the crew rowed approximately 600 nautical miles to King George Island in Antarctica over 12 days, navigating some of the planet's most volatile waters with waves exceeding 20 feet and winds up to 50 knots. This expedition marked the inaugural rowing transit of the Drake Passage without sails or engines, establishing five Guinness World Records for the team, including the first row across the passage and the fastest unsupported crossing.[7][43]The 2019 row completed Paul's Ocean Explorers Grand Slam, making him the first person to row across all five oceans unaided, following his prior completions of the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, and Arctic Oceans by 2017. The crew operated in relentless 90-minute shifts around the clock, battling hypothermia, capsizes, and equipment failures in temperatures dipping below freezing, which tested their endurance in the absence of resupply or external support.[7][43]In January 2023, Paul captained the Shackleton Mission, a six-person international crew commemorating the centennial of Ernest Shackleton's death, rowing from King George Island in Antarctica to Laurie Island in the South Orkney Islands—a distance of 407 nautical miles completed in six days. The expedition was originally planned to continue to South Georgia but diverted to Laurie Island after a crew member sustained an injury on the first day. This voyage pioneered the first row originating from the Antarctic continent itself, as well as the first human-powered crossings of the Scotia Sea and from Antarctica to the South Orkney Islands, securing three Guinness World Records for the team. The expedition faced extreme conditions, including 40-knot gusts, 15-foot swells, and sub-zero temperatures that caused frostbite and equipment icing, yet the crew maintained cohesion through structured rotations and mutual support.[44][4][45]Comparing the two Southern Ocean expeditions highlights escalating challenges and evolving team strategies. The 2019 Drake Passage row emphasized raw survival in the notoriously unpredictable "Drake Shake," with its longer duration amplifying risks of physical exhaustion and interpersonal strain among a crew of high-profile solo adventurers. In contrast, the 2023 mission traversed the Scotia Sea's katabatic winds and ice hazards in half the time, benefiting from refined logistics like advanced cold-weather gear, but demanding tighter crew dynamics in a more diverse group from five countries to manage rapid decision-making amid sudden storms. Both underscored the Southern Ocean's dual threats of mechanical failure from hypothermia-induced errors and psychological pressure from isolation, yet Paul's leadership in each fostered resilience, turning potential breakdowns into collective triumphs.[46][43][44]The 2023 return to Antarctic waters served as Paul's final ocean rowing endeavor before retirement, building on the 2019 Grand Slam by pushing boundaries in polar extremes without altering his accumulative records.[4][46]
World records and pioneering feats
Speed and performance records
Fiann Paul achieved a landmark in ocean rowing by becoming the first person to hold three simultaneous overall speed records across different oceans in 2016, encompassing the Atlantic Ocean (eastbound), Indian Ocean, and Pacific Ocean. This "hat-trick" was certified by Guinness World Records following his participation in the mid-Pacific crossing that year, marking him as the fastest rower for each of these routes at the time.[47]In 2017, Paul extended this accomplishment by securing the overall speed record for the Arctic Ocean open waters during his Polar Row expedition, thereby becoming the first individual to simultaneously hold four ocean rowing speed records on distinct oceans. This feat solidified his position as the most record-breaking ocean rower to date.[6]Paul replicated the three simultaneous speed records in 2017, earning recognition as the first to achieve this distinction twice. His ongoing pursuits culminated in 2023 with the first Ocean Rowing Grand Hat Trick, where he held three overall speed records concurrently on the Indian, Arctic, and Southern Oceans for the third time, including a record-setting performance during his Shackleton Mission expedition across the Southern Ocean. This update reaffirmed his dominance in polar and oceanic speed benchmarks post-2019.
First-time geographical achievements
Fiann Paul's geographical achievements in ocean rowing include several pioneering firsts, establishing unprecedented routes and explorations in remote waters. In 2014, he participated in the first team of seven to successfully row across the Indian Ocean east to west, departing from Geraldton, Australia, and arriving in Mauritius after covering approximately 3,656 nautical miles. This expedition marked the first successful row across the Indian Ocean east to west by a team of seven.[48]In 2017, Paul captained the first team of five to row the Arctic Ocean open waters unsupported, starting from Tromsø, Norway, and navigating north amid ice hazards and extreme conditions to reach Longyearbyen, Svalbard. This feat represented the first fully self-supported human-powered crossing of this Arctic route without external resupply, while also achieving the northernmost latitude reached by a rowing vessel at 79°55' N near the edge of the Arctic ice pack.[49][50][51]Paul's 2019 leadership of the Impossible Row expedition achieved the first human-powered crossing of the Drake Passage, rowing from Punta Arenas, Chile, to Elephant Island in Antarctica over 870 nautical miles of notoriously treacherous seas. This pioneering transit not only crossed the boundary into the Southern Ocean but also set the southernmost latitude reached by a rowing vessel at 64°13' S during the approach to the Antarctic Peninsula.[7][52]In 2023, at age 42, Paul led the Shackleton Mission, the first rowing expedition to depart directly from the Antarctic continent at King George Island, crossing the Scotia Sea south to north toward the South Orkney Islands. This 407-nautical-mile journey established multiple firsts, including the inaugural row from the Antarctic mainland and the first traversal of the Scotia Sea by rowboat, further extending human-powered exploration in the polar Southern Ocean.[44][53]
Accumulative and overall records
Fiann Paul holds the most Guinness World Records in the field of ocean rowing, with over 50 records certified as of 2025, including 18 "firsts" that underscore his unparalleled achievements in the sport.[46][54] These encompass a wide array of speed, endurance, and pioneering milestones across multiple oceans, establishing him as the dominant figure in accumulative accomplishments within ocean rowing history.[4]Paul is recognized as the first and only individual to achieve the Ocean Explorers Grand Slam, successfully rowing across all five oceans—Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern—between 2011 and 2019.[2] This feat not only marks the most oceans rowed by any single explorer but also highlights his cumulative progression from debut crossings to extreme polar expeditions, culminating in a comprehensive mastery of global oceanic challenges.[46]In 2017, Paul earned the title of the most record-breaking ocean rower through simultaneous holdings of multiple speed records across different oceans, a distinction that solidified his accumulative dominance at that time.[6] By 2023, his total time at sea exceeded 171 days, reflecting the extensive cumulative effort invested in these endeavors and contributing to broader accumulative feats such as the greatest aggregate distance rowed in polar open waters.[46][55]
Honors, accolades, and later pursuits
Guinness and exploratory awards
Fiann Paul is recognized by Guinness World Records as the most record-breaking explorer in ocean rowing, holding 14 world record firsts in geographical explorations.[4][3] Among his prominent titles, Paul earned the Ocean Explorer's Grand Slam in 2019 for becoming the first person to complete open-water crossings on all five oceans by human power.[7] He also holds the distinction of the first Ocean Rowing Grand Hat Trick, achieved on January 17, 2023, marking a triple hat-trick of pioneering feats across multiple oceans.[56]In 2023, Paul's leadership of the Shackleton Mission—a human-powered rowing expedition from the Antarctic continent—resulted in eight Guinness World Firsts, including the first such voyage originating directly from Antarctica.[57] This culminated his series of polar achievements, for which he was additionally titled the first person to row in the open waters of both polar regions as of 2020.[58]Beyond Guinness, Paul received the Honorary Master Mariner award in 2020 from the Association of Master Mariners at Gdynia Maritime University in Poland, honoring his contributions to maritime exploration.[59] The Ocean Rowing Society International (ORSI) serves as the governing body for ocean rowing records and expeditions.[60]Paul's expeditions have garnered significant media recognition, including a feature profile by Trans World Sport in Reykjavik, Iceland, highlighting his status as one of the country's most successful athletes.[61] His Antarctic and Southern Ocean voyages were documented in Discovery Channel's The Impossible Row series, which chronicled the team's pioneering efforts and broadcast episodes focusing on his leadership.[62]
Psychoanalytic and professional transitions
Following the completion of his 2023 Southern Ocean expedition, Fiann Paul transitioned away from full-time ocean rowing, marking the end of his active career in extreme endurance exploration. This shift allowed him to focus on his burgeoning practice as a Jungian psychoanalyst, which he had begun developing after completing training at the C.G. Jung Institute in Zürich. By 2025, Paul was actively engaged in clinical work, drawing on post-doctoral certification in depth psychology to offer analysis that emphasizes the totality of the psyche.[9][46]Paul's psychoanalytic practice integrates Jungian principles with insights from his exploratory experiences, viewing ocean crossings as metaphors for inner journeys. In speaking engagements, he combines personal narratives of ultra-endurance challenges with depth psychology to explore themes of mental resilience, the psyche's drive in extreme conditions, and the neurological underpinnings of performance. For instance, his presentations for audiences including psychologists, endurance athletes, and corporate groups highlight how archetypal encounters in isolation mirror therapeutic processes of individuation. This fusion is also evident in his writings and podcasts, where he parallels physical polar expeditions with "inner expeditions" into the unconscious.[63][9]Ongoing projects further blend therapy, art, and adventure education, positioning Paul as a multifaceted practitioner. His 2025 release of the musical composition "Jungian Prayer," featuring Jungian analyst James Hollis, serves as an auditory exploration of personal transformation, bridging existential inquiry with sonic art to evoke dreamlike states of the psyche. Additionally, Paul leads workshops and lectures that incorporate adventure-based education, using his rowing background to inform therapeutic approaches for building psychological fortitude in diverse groups, such as young adults and seafarers. These initiatives underscore a holistic model where artistic expression and experiential learning support analytic depth.[64][63]