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Akseli Gallen-Kallela

Akseli Gallen-Kallela (26 April 1865 – 7 March 1931) was a Finnish painter who is best known for his illustrations of the Kalevala, the Finnish national epic. His work is considered a very important aspect of the Finnish national identity. He changed his name from Gallén to Gallen-Kallela in 1907.[1]

Akseli Gallen-Kallela
Born
Axel Waldemar Gallén

(1865-04-26)26 April 1865
Died7 March 1931(1931-03-07) (aged 65)
NationalityFinnish
Known forPainting
MovementRomantic nationalism, Realism, Symbolism

Life and career

Early life

Gallen-Kallela was born Axel Waldemar Gallén in Pori, Finland, in a Swedish-speaking family. His father Peter Gallén worked as police chief and lawyer.[2] Gallen-Kallela was raised in Tyrvää.[3] At the age of 11 he was sent to Helsinki to study at a grammar school, because his father opposed his ambition to become a painter. After his father's death in 1879, Gallen-Kallela attended drawing classes at the Finnish Art Society (1881–1884) and studied privately under Adolf von Becker.[1]

Paris

 
Self-Portrait at the Easel, 1885

In 1884 he moved to Paris, to study at the Académie Julian.[4] In Paris he became friends with the Finnish painter Albert Edelfelt, the Norwegian painter Carl Dørnberger, and the Swedish writer August Strindberg.[1] During this period he traveled back and forth between Finland and Paris.[1]

Mary Slöör

 
Problem (Symposium) depicting Gallen-Kallela himself, Oskar Merikanto, Robert Kajanus and Jean Sibelius, 1894 (fi)
 
Self-Portrait in Fresco, 1894

He married Mary Slöör in 1890. The couple had three children, Impi Marjatta, Kirsti and Jorma. On their honeymoon to East Karelia, Gallen-Kallela started collecting material for his depictions of the Kalevala. This period is characterized by romantic paintings of the Kalevala, such as the Aino Myth, and by several landscape paintings, although by 1894 the influence of symbolism is heavily visible in his works.[1]

Berlin and tragedy

 
Self-Portrait ’en face’, 1897

In December 1894, Gallen-Kallela moved to Berlin to oversee the joint exhibition of his works with the works of Norwegian painter Edvard Munch. At the time Gallen-Kallela also designed a grand cabin called Kalela for his family far from everything on the shore of Lake Ruovesi. It was built from dead standing pine by 13 local carpenters in a year from 1894 to 1895.[12][13]

In March 1895, his trip was ended when he received a telegram that his daughter Impi Marjatta had died from diphtheria. This would prove to be a turning point in his work. While his works had previously been romantic, after his daughter's death Gallen-Kallela painted more aggressive works. In the years 1896–1899 he painted what are considered his most famous works: The Defense of the Sampo, Lemminkäinen's Mother, Joukahainen's Revenge and Kullervo's Curse.[1] In May 1895, Gallen and Mary visited London, with his intent being the purchase of a graphic art press. While there he also learned about stained glass. At the end of 1897 the family took a trip to Florence, also visiting Pompeii, where he studied the art of frescoes.[1]

Paris 1900 Exposition

For the Paris World Fair in 1900, Gallen-Kallela painted frescoes for the Finnish Pavilion.[1] In the fresco Ilmarinen Plowing the Field of Vipers there was a hidden political message: one of the vipers is wearing a small Romanov crown,[14] telling of Gallen-Kallela's wish for an independent Finland at the time of the Russification of Finland.

The Paris Exposition secured Gallen-Kallela's stature as the leading Finnish artist.[15] In 1901 he was commissioned to paint the fresco, Kullervo Sets Off for War, for the concert hall of the Helsinki Student's Union.[15] Between 1901 and 1903 he painted the frescoes for the Jusélius Mausoleum in Pori, memorializing the 11-year-old daughter of the industrialist Fritz Arthur Jusélius. (The frescoes however were soon damaged by dampness, and were completely destroyed by fire in December 1931. Jusélius assigned the artist's son Jorma to repaint them from the original sketches.[16] The reconstruction was completed just before Jorma's death in 1939.)[1]

Gallen-Kallela officially finnicized his name to the more Finnish-sounding Akseli Gallen-Kallela in 1907.[1] His idea for a 700-page Great Kalevala [fi] was fully formed in 1909 with a publication of his plan in the Valvoja magazine.[17]

Kenya

 
Akseli Gallen-Kallela After Returning From Africa by Sigurd Wettenhovi-Aspa in 1911
 
Self-Portrait for the Uffizi Gallery, 1916

In 1908 with renewal in mind, Gallen-Kallela and his family moved to Paris. However the city and the new direction art was being taken didn't feel as hospitable as he had hoped, and so in May 1909 they moved much further away to Nairobi in Kenya. He was the first Finnish artist to paint south of the Sahara, and he totalled over 150 expressionistic works. Although artistically the paintings are of fluctuating quality, their colors and the synergy of the colors are remarkable. They returned to Finland in February 1911.[1] Between 1911 and 1913 he designed and built a studio and house for his family at Tarvaspää, approximately 10 km northwest of the centre of Helsinki.[19]

Finnish Civil War

 
Gallen-Kallela in his lieutenant uniform during the civil war, 1918
 
Portrait of A. Gallen-Kallela, Ilya Repin, 1920

The family moved back from Tarvaspää to Kalela in 1915 to escape the turmoil of WW I. A few years later in 1918, Gallen-Kallela and his son Jorma took part in the fighting at the front of the Finnish Civil War. When the regent, General Mannerheim, heard about this, he invited Gallen-Kallela to design the flags, official decorations and uniforms for the newly independent Finland. For the flag, Gallen-Kallela proposed a white-blue cross flag, with colors inverted (white cross on blue), but this was considered too similar to the Swedish flag and particularly the Greek flag of the time. In 1919 he was appointed aide-de-camp to Mannerheim.[1] In 1920 he made an agreement with the publishing company WSOY for the eventual publication of Great Kalevala, with the less decorative Koru-Kalevala being published first in 1922.[17]

Taos, New Mexico, and later life

 
Gallen-Kallela in the National Museum of Finland in front of his fresco version of The Defense of the Sampo, 1928

In December 1923 he moved to the United States, where his family also followed him in autumn 1924. He first spent time in Chicago, and an exhibition of his work toured several cities.[21] In Chicago he was impressed by Native American art and moved to Taos, New Mexico, at the art colony there to study it further. During this time in the United States he also began sketching out the Great Kalevala in much more detail. In May 1926, the family returned to Finland. Two years later in 1928 together with his son Jorma he painted the Kalevala frescoes at the lobby of the National Museum of Finland. Then in 1930 he made an agreement to paint a gigantic fresco for the bank Kansallis-Osake-Pankki, but on 7 March 1931 while returning from a lecture in Copenhagen he suddenly died of pneumonia in Stockholm.[1]

Legacy

His studio and house at Tarvaspää was opened as the Gallen-Kallela Museum in 1961; it houses some of his works and research facilities on Gallen-Kallela himself.[22][23]

 
Gallen-Kallela Museum in Tarvaspää

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The girl who modeled for the painting was a future parliament member, Maria Raunio.[5]
  2. ^ The frames were painted by Elin Danielson-Gambogi.[7]
  3. ^ Gallen-Kallela was inspired by Sibelius' tone poem En saga (A Fairy Tale). On the right is Sibelius himself, at top left is the visuals it brought to Gallen-Kallela's mind and the empty section at bottom left was supposed to have notes from the tone poem, but Sibelius didn't wish to add them.[10][11]
  4. ^ There is also a Jusélius Mausoleum fresco called Spring from 1903.
  5. ^ He was an aide and a friend to the Gallen-Kallela family and always escorted the family's children to school.[20]

References

Citations

Sources

Books

  • Jackson, D.; Wageman, P., eds. (2006). Akseli Gallen-Kallela, De magie van Finland [Akseli Gallen-Kallela, The Magic of Finland] (softcover) (in Dutch). Rotterdam: NAi Booksellers / Groninger Museum. ISBN 978-90-5662-523-8.
  • Martin, Timo; Pusa, Erja (1985). Akseli Gallen-Kallela, 1865-1931 (hardcover). Translated by John Derome. Tarvaspää: Gallen-Kallela Museum. OCLC 29071282.
  • Okkonen, Onni (1916). "Trip to Kuusamo". Akseli Gallen-Kallela, elämä ja taide [Akseli Gallen-Kallela, life and art] (in Finnish). Porvoo-Helsinki: Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö (WSOY).
  • Pohjolainen, Raija (2016). Tyttö Keuruun vanhassa kirkossa [A girl in the old church in Keuruu] (in Finnish). Vantaa: Kellastupa. ISBN 978-95-2578-723-8.

Websites

  • "Ainolan taideteokset / Aino ja Jean Sibeliuksen koti" [Welcome to Ainola! / The home of Aino and Jean Sibelius]. Ainola (in Finnish). Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  • "Akseli Gallen-Kallela (1865-1931). A Passion for Finland". Musée d'Orsay. 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  • "Akseli Gallen-Kallela ikuisti Keitelettä – teoskopio sai paikan Lintulahden Nesteeltä" [Akseli Gallen-Kallela immortalized Keitele - a copy of the work was received from Lintulahti Neste]. Aksa (in Finnish). 9 December 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  • "Gallen-Kallela 150 years". Gallen-Kallela Museum. 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
  • "Gallen-Kallelan rapistunut erämaa-ateljee avataan heinäkuuksi" [The dilapidated wilderness studio in Gallen-Kallela will open in July]. Yle (in Finnish). 29 June 2010. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  • Hämäläinen, Jukka (24 May 2018). "Suomen Pankki esittelee taideaarteitaan avoimin ovin – Tiesitkö että Aino-triptyykistä on kaksi erilaista versiota?" [The Bank of Finland presents its art treasures openly - Did you know that there are two different versions of the Aino triptych?]. Vantaan Sanomat (in Finnish). Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  • "Kalela". Ruovesi. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  • "Kulttuurikurkkaus" [Cultural corner] (PDF). Gallen-Kallela Museum (in Finnish). August 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  • Leppänen, Mikko (23 January 2020). "Gallen-Kallelan Palokärki päätyi pariisilaiseen taidemuseoon" [Gallen-Kallela's Palokärki ended up in an art museum in Paris]. Yle (in Finnish). Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  • Mikkonen, Nadja (19 September 2017). "Suur-Kalevala oli Akseli Gallen-Kallelan hurja haave – haukkui kirjeellä kustantajan, kun ymmärrystä ei löytynyt" [The Great Kalevala was Akseli Gallen-Kallela's wild dream - the publisher barked with a letter when no understanding was found]. Yle (in Finnish). Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  • Reitala, Aimo (16 September 1997). "Gallen-Kallela, Akseli (1865–1931)". 100 Faces from Finland – a Biographical Kaleidoscope. Translated by Fletcher Roderick. Biographical Centre of the Finnish Literature Society. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  • Ringbom, Sixten (1996). "Gallen-Kallela, Akseli (1865–1931), painter, graphic artist, designer". Grove Art Online. Oxford Index. Retrieved 4 February 2017.
  • Saressalo, Lassi (2018). "Matka kultakauteen Kansallisromantiikkaa Kainuusta ja kauempaakin" [A journey into the golden age National romance from Kainuu and beyond]. Kotiseutuliitto (in Finnish). Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  • Sipilä, Annamari (4 November 2019). "Mysteeriomistajalla vuosikymmeniä ollut Gallen-Kallelan miljoonateos Palokärki tulee myyntiin New Yorkissa – lintuun kiteytyy suomalaisten vastarinta" [Gallen-Kallela's millennial work Palokärki, which has had a mystery owner for decades, goes on sale in New York - Finnish bird crystallizes resistance]. Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish). Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  • von Donsdorff, Anna-Maria (2017). "Correspondences – Jean Sibelius in a Forest of Image and Myth" (PDF). FNG Research. Retrieved 22 August 2020.

External links

  Media related to Akseli Gallen-Kallela at Wikimedia Commons

akseli, gallen, kallela, april, 1865, march, 1931, finnish, painter, best, known, illustrations, kalevala, finnish, national, epic, work, considered, very, important, aspect, finnish, national, identity, changed, name, from, gallén, gallen, kallela, 1907, born. Akseli Gallen Kallela 26 April 1865 7 March 1931 was a Finnish painter who is best known for his illustrations of the Kalevala the Finnish national epic His work is considered a very important aspect of the Finnish national identity He changed his name from Gallen to Gallen Kallela in 1907 1 Akseli Gallen KallelaBornAxel Waldemar Gallen 1865 04 26 26 April 1865Pori FinlandDied7 March 1931 1931 03 07 aged 65 Stockholm SwedenNationalityFinnishKnown forPaintingMovementRomantic nationalism Realism Symbolism Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Paris 1 3 Mary Sloor 1 4 Berlin and tragedy 1 5 Paris 1900 Exposition 1 6 Kenya 1 7 Finnish Civil War 1 8 Taos New Mexico and later life 2 Legacy 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Sources 5 2 1 Books 5 2 2 Websites 6 External linksLife and career EditEarly life Edit Gallen Kallela was born Axel Waldemar Gallen in Pori Finland in a Swedish speaking family His father Peter Gallen worked as police chief and lawyer 2 Gallen Kallela was raised in Tyrvaa 3 At the age of 11 he was sent to Helsinki to study at a grammar school because his father opposed his ambition to become a painter After his father s death in 1879 Gallen Kallela attended drawing classes at the Finnish Art Society 1881 1884 and studied privately under Adolf von Becker 1 Moonlit Landscape 1881 his first oil painting Boy and a Crow 1884 fi Decaying Sander 1884 fi Paris Edit Self Portrait at the Easel 1885 In 1884 he moved to Paris to study at the Academie Julian 4 In Paris he became friends with the Finnish painter Albert Edelfelt the Norwegian painter Carl Dornberger and the Swedish writer August Strindberg 1 During this period he traveled back and forth between Finland and Paris 1 Life and Death 1884 Parisian Backyard 1884 fi Old Woman with a Cat 1885 fi Boulevard in Paris 1885 fi In a Cafe in Paris 1886 Woman Cooking Whitefish 1886 Rustic Life 1887 fi The First Lesson 1887 1889 Demasquee 1888 fi In the Sauna 1889 fi Wound Fever 1889 fi Girl in the Old Church of Keuruu 1889 fi note 1 Mary Sloor Edit Problem Symposium depicting Gallen Kallela himself Oskar Merikanto Robert Kajanus and Jean Sibelius 1894 fi Self Portrait in Fresco 1894 He married Mary Sloor in 1890 The couple had three children Impi Marjatta Kirsti and Jorma On their honeymoon to East Karelia Gallen Kallela started collecting material for his depictions of the Kalevala This period is characterized by romantic paintings of the Kalevala such as the Aino Myth and by several landscape paintings although by 1894 the influence of symbolism is heavily visible in his works 1 Madonna Mary and Marjatta 1891 fi Aino Myth Triptych 1891 6 fi Shepherd Boy from Paanajarvi 1892 Mantykoski Waterfall 1892 1894 fi note 2 Portrait of the Artist s Wife 1893 The Forging of the Sampo 1893 fi Black Woodpecker 1894 8 9 fi Conceptio Artis 1894 Sibelius as the Composer of En saga 1894 note 3 Ad Astra 1894 fi Berlin and tragedy Edit Self Portrait en face 1897 In December 1894 Gallen Kallela moved to Berlin to oversee the joint exhibition of his works with the works of Norwegian painter Edvard Munch At the time Gallen Kallela also designed a grand cabin called Kalela for his family far from everything on the shore of Lake Ruovesi It was built from dead standing pine by 13 local carpenters in a year from 1894 to 1895 12 13 In March 1895 his trip was ended when he received a telegram that his daughter Impi Marjatta had died from diphtheria This would prove to be a turning point in his work While his works had previously been romantic after his daughter s death Gallen Kallela painted more aggressive works In the years 1896 1899 he painted what are considered his most famous works The Defense of the Sampo Lemminkainen s Mother Joukahainen s Revenge and Kullervo s Curse 1 In May 1895 Gallen and Mary visited London with his intent being the purchase of a graphic art press While there he also learned about stained glass At the end of 1897 the family took a trip to Florence also visiting Pompeii where he studied the art of frescoes 1 Portrait of Edvard Munch 1895 Kalela on a Winter Night 1896 The Artist s Mother 1896 The Defense of the Sampo 1896 fi Lemminkainen s Mother 1897 Joukahainen s Revenge 1897 fi The Fratricide 1897 from Kanteletar Mary Sewing on the Veranda of Kalela 1897 Kullervo s Curse 1899 fi February Vision 1899 Paris 1900 Exposition Edit For the Paris World Fair in 1900 Gallen Kallela painted frescoes for the Finnish Pavilion 1 In the fresco Ilmarinen Plowing the Field of Vipers there was a hidden political message one of the vipers is wearing a small Romanov crown 14 telling of Gallen Kallela s wish for an independent Finland at the time of the Russification of Finland The Paris Exposition secured Gallen Kallela s stature as the leading Finnish artist 15 In 1901 he was commissioned to paint the fresco Kullervo Sets Off for War for the concert hall of the Helsinki Student s Union 15 Between 1901 and 1903 he painted the frescoes for the Juselius Mausoleum in Pori memorializing the 11 year old daughter of the industrialist Fritz Arthur Juselius The frescoes however were soon damaged by dampness and were completely destroyed by fire in December 1931 Juselius assigned the artist s son Jorma to repaint them from the original sketches 16 The reconstruction was completed just before Jorma s death in 1939 1 Gallen Kallela officially finnicized his name to the more Finnish sounding Akseli Gallen Kallela in 1907 1 His idea for a 700 page Great Kalevala fi was fully formed in 1909 with a publication of his plan in the Valvoja magazine 17 Sketch for the 1900 Exposition fresco Ilmarinen Plowing the Field of Vipers 1899 Liekki rya designed by Gallen Kallela Spring c 1900 note 4 Kullervo Sets Off for War 1901 large mural at Old Student House By the River of Tuonela study for the Juselius Mausoleum frescos 1903 fi Lake Keitele 1905 18 fi The Theft of the Sampo 1905 fi The Departure of Vainamoinen 1906 fi The Lair of the Lynx 1906 Bil Bol Poster for an Automobile Retailer 1907 Kenya Edit Akseli Gallen Kallela After Returning From Africa by Sigurd Wettenhovi Aspa in 1911 Self Portrait for the Uffizi Gallery 1916 In 1908 with renewal in mind Gallen Kallela and his family moved to Paris However the city and the new direction art was being taken didn t feel as hospitable as he had hoped and so in May 1909 they moved much further away to Nairobi in Kenya He was the first Finnish artist to paint south of the Sahara and he totalled over 150 expressionistic works Although artistically the paintings are of fluctuating quality their colors and the synergy of the colors are remarkable They returned to Finland in February 1911 1 Between 1911 and 1913 he designed and built a studio and house for his family at Tarvaspaa approximately 10 km northwest of the centre of Helsinki 19 The Oceanides 1909 Cafe in Paris 1909 Skeleton of a Camel 1909 Untitled 1909 Kikuyu Woman 1909 Portrait of Kenosua 1909 1910 note 5 Rhinoceros and Euphorbia Trees 1909 1910 Hippos in the Tana River 1910 Homo Victor Victorious Man 1910 Coral Tree in Blossom 1910 Finnish Civil War Edit Gallen Kallela in his lieutenant uniform during the civil war 1918 Portrait of A Gallen Kallela Ilya Repin 1920 The family moved back from Tarvaspaa to Kalela in 1915 to escape the turmoil of WW I A few years later in 1918 Gallen Kallela and his son Jorma took part in the fighting at the front of the Finnish Civil War When the regent General Mannerheim heard about this he invited Gallen Kallela to design the flags official decorations and uniforms for the newly independent Finland For the flag Gallen Kallela proposed a white blue cross flag with colors inverted white cross on blue but this was considered too similar to the Swedish flag and particularly the Greek flag of the time In 1919 he was appointed aide de camp to Mannerheim 1 In 1920 he made an agreement with the publishing company WSOY for the eventual publication of Great Kalevala with the less decorative Koru Kalevala being published first in 1922 17 Kalela in Autumn 1915 The Lovers 1906 1917 Portrait of Mary 1917 Kirsti Playing the Cello 1917 Regretful Kullervo 1918 Lemminkainen by the River of Fire 1920 Taos New Mexico and later life Edit Gallen Kallela in the National Museum of Finland in front of his fresco version of The Defense of the Sampo 1928 In December 1923 he moved to the United States where his family also followed him in autumn 1924 He first spent time in Chicago and an exhibition of his work toured several cities 21 In Chicago he was impressed by Native American art and moved to Taos New Mexico at the art colony there to study it further During this time in the United States he also began sketching out the Great Kalevala in much more detail In May 1926 the family returned to Finland Two years later in 1928 together with his son Jorma he painted the Kalevala frescoes at the lobby of the National Museum of Finland Then in 1930 he made an agreement to paint a gigantic fresco for the bank Kansallis Osake Pankki but on 7 March 1931 while returning from a lecture in Copenhagen he suddenly died of pneumonia in Stockholm 1 Indian Chief Clear Water 1924 The Indian Sia Ohutaa 1925 Our Home in Taos 1925 Taos Home in Sunlight 1925 Indian on Horseback in Snow 1925 Taos 1925 Crack Willow and Blue Bird in New Mexico 1925 The Great Pike 1928 fresco based on an earlier a 1904 painting Portrait of Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim 1929 Page depicting the birth of Vainamoinen from the unfinished Great Kalevala fi 1920 1930Legacy EditHis studio and house at Tarvaspaa was opened as the Gallen Kallela Museum in 1961 it houses some of his works and research facilities on Gallen Kallela himself 22 23 Gallen Kallela Museum in TarvaspaaSee also EditGolden Age of Finnish Art Finnish artNotes Edit The girl who modeled for the painting was a future parliament member Maria Raunio 5 The frames were painted by Elin Danielson Gambogi 7 Gallen Kallela was inspired by Sibelius tone poem En saga A Fairy Tale On the right is Sibelius himself at top left is the visuals it brought to Gallen Kallela s mind and the empty section at bottom left was supposed to have notes from the tone poem but Sibelius didn t wish to add them 10 11 There is also a Juselius Mausoleum fresco called Spring from 1903 He was an aide and a friend to the Gallen Kallela family and always escorted the family s children to school 20 References EditCitations Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Reitala 1997 Martin amp Pusa 1985 p 5 Musee d Orsay 2012 Martin amp Pusa 1985 p 65 Pohjolainen 2016 Hamalainen 2018 Okkonen 1916 pp 248 261 Sipila 2019 Leppanen 2020 Ainola von Donsdorff 2017 Ruovesi Yle 2010 Saressalo 2018 a b Martin amp Pusa 1985 p 12 Martin amp Pusa 1985 p 37 a b Mikkonen 2017 Aksa 2018 Martin amp Pusa 1985 p 38 Kulttuurikurkkaus 2019 Martin amp Pusa 1985 p 39 Gallen Kallela Museum 2015 Ringbom 1996 Sources Edit Books Edit Jackson D Wageman P eds 2006 Akseli Gallen Kallela De magie van Finland Akseli Gallen Kallela The Magic of Finland softcover in Dutch Rotterdam NAi Booksellers Groninger Museum ISBN 978 90 5662 523 8 Martin Timo Pusa Erja 1985 Akseli Gallen Kallela 1865 1931 hardcover Translated by John Derome Tarvaspaa Gallen Kallela Museum OCLC 29071282 Okkonen Onni 1916 Trip to Kuusamo Akseli Gallen Kallela elama ja taide Akseli Gallen Kallela life and art in Finnish Porvoo Helsinki Werner Soderstrom Osakeyhtio WSOY Pohjolainen Raija 2016 Tytto Keuruun vanhassa kirkossa A girl in the old church in Keuruu in Finnish Vantaa Kellastupa ISBN 978 95 2578 723 8 Websites Edit Ainolan taideteokset Aino ja Jean Sibeliuksen koti Welcome to Ainola The home of Aino and Jean Sibelius Ainola in Finnish Retrieved 22 August 2020 Akseli Gallen Kallela 1865 1931 A Passion for Finland Musee d Orsay 2012 Retrieved 30 November 2018 Akseli Gallen Kallela ikuisti Keiteletta teoskopio sai paikan Lintulahden Nesteelta Akseli Gallen Kallela immortalized Keitele a copy of the work was received from Lintulahti Neste Aksa in Finnish 9 December 2018 Retrieved 21 August 2020 Gallen Kallela 150 years Gallen Kallela Museum 2015 Retrieved 4 January 2017 Gallen Kallelan rapistunut eramaa ateljee avataan heinakuuksi The dilapidated wilderness studio in Gallen Kallela will open in July Yle in Finnish 29 June 2010 Retrieved 21 August 2020 Hamalainen Jukka 24 May 2018 Suomen Pankki esittelee taideaarteitaan avoimin ovin Tiesitko etta Aino triptyykista on kaksi erilaista versiota The Bank of Finland presents its art treasures openly Did you know that there are two different versions of the Aino triptych Vantaan Sanomat in Finnish Retrieved 21 August 2020 Kalela Ruovesi Retrieved 21 August 2020 Kulttuurikurkkaus Cultural corner PDF Gallen Kallela Museum in Finnish August 2019 Retrieved 22 August 2020 Leppanen Mikko 23 January 2020 Gallen Kallelan Palokarki paatyi pariisilaiseen taidemuseoon Gallen Kallela s Palokarki ended up in an art museum in Paris Yle in Finnish Retrieved 21 August 2020 Mikkonen Nadja 19 September 2017 Suur Kalevala oli Akseli Gallen Kallelan hurja haave haukkui kirjeella kustantajan kun ymmarrysta ei loytynyt The Great Kalevala was Akseli Gallen Kallela s wild dream the publisher barked with a letter when no understanding was found Yle in Finnish Retrieved 25 August 2020 Reitala Aimo 16 September 1997 Gallen Kallela Akseli 1865 1931 100 Faces from Finland a Biographical Kaleidoscope Translated by Fletcher Roderick Biographical Centre of the Finnish Literature Society Retrieved 4 February 2017 Ringbom Sixten 1996 Gallen Kallela Akseli 1865 1931 painter graphic artist designer Grove Art Online Oxford Index Retrieved 4 February 2017 Saressalo Lassi 2018 Matka kultakauteen Kansallisromantiikkaa Kainuusta ja kauempaakin A journey into the golden age National romance from Kainuu and beyond Kotiseutuliitto in Finnish Retrieved 20 August 2020 Sipila Annamari 4 November 2019 Mysteeriomistajalla vuosikymmenia ollut Gallen Kallelan miljoonateos Palokarki tulee myyntiin New Yorkissa lintuun kiteytyy suomalaisten vastarinta Gallen Kallela s millennial work Palokarki which has had a mystery owner for decades goes on sale in New York Finnish bird crystallizes resistance Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish Retrieved 21 August 2020 von Donsdorff Anna Maria 2017 Correspondences Jean Sibelius in a Forest of Image and Myth PDF FNG Research Retrieved 22 August 2020 External links Edit Media related to Akseli Gallen Kallela at Wikimedia Commons List of all paintings by Gallen Kallela on Commons Gallen Kallela Museum website Akseli Gallen Kallela Biografiskt lexikon for Finland in Swedish Helsingfors Svenska litteratursallskapet i Finland urn NBN fi sls 4673 1416928957279 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Akseli Gallen Kallela amp oldid 1134443348, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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