Showing posts with label Finnish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Finnish. Show all posts

04/09/25

Emma Luukkala @ HAM Gallery - Helsinki Art Museum - "Night Wash" Exhibition

Emma Luukkala: Night Wash
HAM Gallery, Helsinki 
20 September - 9 November 2025

Emma Luukkala
Emma Luukkala
Night Wash, 2025 (detail)
Photo: Emma Luukkala

In her HAM gallery exhibition, EMMA LUUKKALA ponders the overlap between the sacred and the everyday. Life flows in endless piles of things and to-do lists, with moments of meaning, intense in their brightness, at the heart of the chaos.
Jobs I’ve done today: swept the floors, folded the laundry, and moved things from place to place. From somewhere, I can hear a blackbird singing.
Not even the grandest and most solemn situations are pure and uncontaminated by the outside world – they are always adorned with everyday chores and annoying dirt. Emma Luukkala asks what sacred could mean in a new materialist context, where the world is not divided dualistically into the superior spiritual and the inferior material, but instead consists of a wide range of intertwined players.

EMMA LUUKKALA (b. 1992) is a Helsinki-based artist who uses painting materials in a variety of ways, combining flat blocks of colour with relief details. She graduated with a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degree from Helsinki Academy of Fine Arts in 2020. In recent years, her work has been exhibited at venues including Jyväskylä Art Museum, Kunsthalle Helsinki, tm•gallery and Galerie Anhava.

HAM GALLERY - HELSINKI ART MUSEUM
Eteläinen Rautatiekatu 8, 00100 Helsinki

28/08/25

Harri Koskinen @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Magnitude" Exhibition

Harri Koskinen: Magnitude
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki 
August 22 – September 21, 2025
 
Harri Koskinen one of Finland’s most renowned designers, presents a new exhibition shaped by compelling, multi-layered themes that navigate borderlands between the mythical and the contemporary. Elements subtly reminiscent of survival gear suggest preparation for an uncertain future, serving as a quiet reminder of today’s volatile global climate. At the same time, the exhibition drifts into the realm of myth and adventure. Rather than creating ominous imagery, Harri Koskinen explores the delicate tension between the material form and conceptual depth of his work.

The exhibition presents a selection of unique glass sculptures, both free-blown and mold-cast. Glass, with its reactive sensitivity, naturally lends itself to the creation of multi-layered forms. As a material born from the transformation of sand through intense heat, then cooled into solid form, glass inherently embodies shifting states of matter. Koskinen’s minimalist visual vocabulary resonates beautifully with the fragility of his medium. Most of the featured sculptures were handcrafted at the historic glassworks in Iittala and Riihimäki, with select pieces produced in Switzerland. This marks Koskinen’s fifth solo exhibition at Galerie Forsblom.

HARRI KOSKINEN (b. 1970), is a highly versatile designer known for his conceptual approach. His practice spans both serial production and one-offs. Over the course of his distinguished career, he has served as design director at Iittala and collaborated with prestigious international brands including Artek, Genelec, Hermès, Issey Miyake, Muu, and Svenskt Tenn. Among his many accolades are the Torsten and Wanja Söderberg Prize, the Compasso d’Oro Award, and the Pro Finlandia Medal. Harri Koskinen lives and works in Espoo and Helsinki.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

24/08/25

Rauha Mäkilä @ Helsinki Contemporary - "Syksy 2025" (Autumn 2025) Exhibition

Rauha Mäkilä 
Syksy 2025 (Autumn 2025)
Helsinki Contemporary
5 - 28 September 2025

Rauha Makila - Photo
Rauha Mäkilä
Photo courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Rauha Makila
Rauha Mäkilä
Tavantakainen, 2025
Oil on canvas, 80,5 cm x 60,5 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Rauha Mäkilä, courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Rauha Makila
Rauha Mäkilä
Piilovaihe, 2025
Oil on canvas, 71 cm x 51 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Rauha Mäkilä, courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Rauha Mäkilä’s solo exhibition Syksy 2025 (Autumn 2025) presents new works united by a common theme: exploring memories through painting.

Rauha Mäkilä draws inspiration from visual notes and photographs, transforming fleeting snapshots of fast-paced moments into painterly form. Unfolding slowly and deliberately, her paintings emphasise process, materiality, colour and composition.

For Rauha Mäkilä, painting is an antidote to the perfection-driven flood of digital images. Like a book, a painting demands time: it can challenge us, and transport us to another place and time.

Rauha Makila Art
Rauha Mäkilä
Halloween 2024, 2025
Oil on canvas, 240 cm x 200 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Rauha Mäkilä, courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Rauha Makila
Rauha Mäkilä
Chaplin 1982, 2024
Oil on canvas, 230 cm x 200 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Rauha Mäkilä, courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Colour is often her point of departure. As she paints, Rauha Mäkilä tests how colours interact to generate different moods and spaces. Too much harmony can be dull. Instead, rhythmic shifts, small imperfections, and even deliberately “wrong” colour choices create compositional vitality. Her works are always constructed in the language of painting: in the brushstrokes across the canvas, in the connections between shapes and colours, in the ways diverse elements support one another, and in what they ultimately convey.

Some of Mäkilä’s new works depict sculptures; others are “meta-paintings,” or paintings of paintings. These do not comment on the art world as such, but probe deeper questions of perception: how we see, what we value, and why. In the end, Mäkilä’s practice reminds us that what we encounter is not reality, but a constructed image—above all, a painting.

HELSINKI CONTEMPORARY
Bulevardi 10, 00120 Helsinki

14/08/25

Eija-Liisa Ahtila @ Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris - "On Breathing" Exhibition

Eija-Liisa Ahtila: On Breathing 
Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris 
September 5 – October 4, 2025 



Eija-Liisa Ahtila - On Breathing
Eija-Liisa Ahtila
On Breathing, 2024 
Single channel installation. Image 4K UHD 
Audio 2.0. 9 min. 45 sec. en boucle. Crystal Eye 2024 
© Eija-Liisa Ahtila, courtesy Marian Goodman Gallery

Marian Goodman Gallery Paris presents a new exhibition by Eija-Liisa Ahtila, which features the French premiere of two new large-scale video installations, On Breathing and APRIL ≈ 61°01' 24°27', 2024. A master of cinematic installations, Ahtila challenges the idea of moving image perspective and constructs an experience of several co-existing temporalities and spaces for the viewers. A continuation of her research over the last decade, the works in the exhibition each explore in their own way forms of ecological narrative and their modes of presentation. Since abandoning a more anthropocentric viewpoint, Ahtila has been seeking to make visible the non-human world, with a focus on trees in particular. While On Breathing depicts the subtle intertwinement of tree branches with the morning mist, APRIL captures the silent passage of one season to the next through spatial movements among the trees and the attentive observation of a forest ecosystem.

On the ground floor of the gallery, the nine-minute projection On Breathing, 2024,is a visual poem in which the focus is the slow and hypnotic movement of the evaporative mist surrounding an oak tree. This morning phenomenon is typical of autumn and winter conditions when the sea remains warmer than the surrounding air and ground. The displacement of the fog and its sound in the branches poetically suggest a vegetal respiration: "The air around the oak tree seems tangible, and the space inside it becomes actual, as if the breathing of the tree were, for a moment, perceivable."

Eija-Liisa Ahtila, who frequently deploys multi-channels and split-screen installations to simultaneously unfold several aspects of one narrative, superimposes layers of video to conjure different temporalities. The wandering of the fog and its interplay with the leaves, the rhythm and the camera angles, all result in a unique, animated tableau.

Considering her recent works as a continuum, Eija-Liisa Ahtila notes that each creative process naturally leads to the next. Since 2011, she has gradually replaced human protagonists with trees and living organisms, resulting in a series of works that address the ecological narrative within the moving image. This new direction questions the contemporary relationship between nature and humanity, as well as the artificial boundary between us and other living beings. "I have attempted to develop visual approaches and methods of storytelling that might show us a way out of anthropocentrism and enable the presence of nonhuman species in our imaginary."

On the gallery lower level, APRIL ≈ 61°01' 24°27', 2024, first exhibited at the Kröller-Müller Museum in the Netherlands, immerses the visitors in the forest of Aulanko Nature Park, Finland, near Ahtila's hometown. Known as a natural environment unsullied by human activity, the forest was filmed for two consecutive seasons in 2022 and 2023, between the end of March and May. If the title of the work evokes the month associated with the regeneration of nature, the 12-meter-long, 8-channel installation shows the subtle transition from late winter to summer. The suite of eight sequences follows a chronological order, showing the forest from the first moments of snowmelt on the left to the premature arrival of summer on the far right.

The scale and horizontal nature of the installation are reminiscent of her iconic work Horizontal, 2011, which came from her desire to represent a giant spruce tree in its entirety. Eija-Liisa Ahtila not only chose to capture the tree by filming it in several horizontal sections, thus avoiding the distortions inherent in the use of a wide-angle lens, but she also decided to present the tree as an horizontal installation on a series of 6 projection screens.

With APRIL, the forest as an ecosystem - where trees and a multitude of organisms and plants constantly interact with each other -  is, for the first time, the center of the artist's attention. The source of the work stems from life in a forest where each singular being is an integrated element of the whole, and the whole is simulaneously within that singular being. To create a cinematic language suited to her subject that immerses us in the forest, the camera movements in the eight sections are fluid and asynchronous, alternating between slow motion and momentary stops. "The theme of APRIL is the spatiality of being, the constant change and shape-taking of the forest, that is its fundamental quality," says Eija-Liisa Ahtila.

Eija-Liisa Ahtila was born in Hämeenlinna, Finland in 1959. She has been honored with numerous prizes over the past two decades that include, most recently, becoming Commander, First Class, of the Order of the White Rose of Finland (2020). She works and lives in Helsinki.

Eija-Liisa Ahtila's work has been widely exhibited since the early 1990s. Horizontal is prominently featured in The Power of Trees, on view until 14 September 2025 at Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art, Kew Gardens, Richmond, near London. Most recently she has had solo exhibitions at Serlachius Manor, Finland (2024); Kröller-Müller Museum (2024), The Netherlands; the Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita, US (2022); the National Gallery of Art, Vilnus, Lithuania (2021); the M Museum, Leuven, Belgium and the Serlachius Museum Gösta, Mänttä, Finland (both 2018). She has also had solo exhibitions at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image, Melbourne, Australia (2017); Guggenheim Bilbao, Spain (2016); Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo, New York and Oi Futuro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (both 2015); Kiasma, Helsinki, Finland (2013); Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden (2012); Carré D'Art, Nîmes, France (2012); Museo del Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico City, Mexico (2012); Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois (2011); Parasol Unit, London, UK (2010); Jeu de Paume, Paris, France (2008), amongst many others. Ahtila was a jury member at the Venice Film Festival in 2011 and the President of the Jury at the FIDMarseille in 2013 (Festival international de cinéma de Marseille).

MARIAN GOODMAN GALLERY
79 rue du Temple, 75003 Paris

21/07/25

Raili Tang @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki

Raili Tang
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki
August 22 – September 21, 2025

Raili Tang’s latest paintings literally capture interwoven layers of time. Originally created in 1996 for an exhibition at Lahti Art Museum, the first iterations were inspired by train rides between Helsinki and Lahti, as Raili Tang gazed out the window at passing fields, barns, and forests. Now, thirty years later, she has returned to these same canvases, using them as the foundation for new artistic explorations. For Tang, the painted surface—built up through countless layers of color and intricate detail—remains her enduring source of inspiration.

In this renewed body of work, expressive floral motifs once again emerge from Tang’s abstract backgrounds. Some of her blooms stand upright in vases; others sprout from the earth itself. Among them are radiant orchids, painted in the spirit of German Expressionist Emil Nolde (1867–1956), alongside humble dandelions pushing up through cracks in the pavement. The theme of time’s passage is deeply embedded not only in the imagery, but in the very making of the works—some of the smaller floral compositions are built on backgrounds that Tang painted during her student years at the Academy of Fine Arts.

A master colorist, Raili Tang weaves a universe of details born from the interplay of pigments. The best way to experience her work is slowly: the layers of paint are like quiet clues, scattered breadcrumbs that lead to small, meaningful revelations. Her droplets of paint, nuanced brushstrokes, and vibrant hues capture a wide emotional spectrum—mirroring life itself.

Raili Tang (b. 1950) has exhibited extensively both in Finland and abroad. Her work is held in several of Finland’s most prestigious collections, including the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, the Sara Hildén Art Museum, the Wihuri and Saastamoinen Foundations, and HAM Helsinki Art Museum. Raili Tang was awarded the Pro Finlandia Medal in 2015.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

21/06/25

Marjatta Tapiola @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Metamorphoses" Exhibition of Paintings

Marjatta Tapiola: Metamorphoses
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki 
June 6 – August 17, 2025

Marjatta Tapiola often takes inspiration for her paintings from literature, from sources such as the Greek Minotaur myth or the work of the Russian poet Anna Akhmatova. Rather than depicting these venerable literary sources literally, she uses them as a vehicle for dealing with themes such as the brutality of life and what it means to be human, exploring emotions, hopes and experiences familiar to everyone.

The exhibition provides a review of Tapiola’s recent oil paintings and works on paper, this time drawing inspiration from selected extracts of poetry by the German-born writer W.G. Sebald (1944-2001) and Autobiography of Red (1998) by the Canadian novelist Anne Carson (b. 1950). Foremost among Tapiola’s sources of literary inspiration are the epic myths of Metamorphoses originally published in Latin by the Roman poet Ovid (43 BCE-18 CE). The classic magnum opus is said to contain almost everything ever written in subsequent literature.

Ovid’s imaginative, sometimes tragic and sometimes humorous tales have inspired countless artists ever since Classical Antiquity and the Renaissance. Marjatta Tapiola is a contemporary artist who interprets Ovid’s powerful verses from her own personal point of view. The task has been a challenging one, and the results are surprising, as always – even to those already familiar with Tapiola’s art. Sebald and Carson both draw on art history and ancient mythology, and their evocatively visual writing has provided Tapiola with fresh inspiration in her exploration of new visual frontiers.

Marjatta Tapiola (b. 1951) ranks among the leading Finnish painters of her generation. Among the many accolades she has received are the Pro Finlandia Medal, the Finnish Cultural Foundation Award in 2004, and the State Prize for Fine Arts in 2006. Her work is held in the Ateneum Art Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, and numerous other major public collections in Finland. Marjatta Tapiola is also an acclaimed portraitist.

GALERIE FORSBLOM, HELSINKI
Lönnrotinkatu 5, 00120 Helsinki
www.galerieforsblom.com

20/06/25

Jussi Goman @ Helsinky Contemporary - "Desire Path" Exhibition

Jussi Goman: Desire Path
Helsinki Contemporary
August 8 - 31, 2025

Jussi Goman
Jussi Goman
Desire Path, 2025
Acrylic on canvas, 200 cm x 180 cm
Photo Jussi Tiainen
© Jussi Goman. Courtesy Helsinki Contemprary

Jussi Goman
Jussi Goman
Where I Wasn't Going, 2025
Acrylic on canvas, 200 cm x 180 cm
Photo Jussi Tiainen
© Jussi Goman. Courtesy Helsinki Contemprary

Jussi Goman
Jussi Goman
Shown Twice, 2024 
Acrylic on canvas, 200 cm x 150 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Jussi Goman. Courtesy Helsinki Contemprary

Jussi Goman’s new paintings feature colour-drenched layers of paint that carve out unruly paths upon an orderly configuration of grids and lines. The resultant pattern is reminiscent of doodles in a graph notebook, a jigsaw puzzle, a Snake video game, or the Minotaur’s labyrinth, invoking spontaneous shortcuts, dead ends, and myriad narratives.

Jussi Goman (b. 1980) is in a class of his own in his command of colour and technique. His paintings are complex tapestries of lightness and heaviness, bold brushstrokes and delicate details. His new paintings combine dazzling, luminous hues with pastel blues and lavenders, with added accents of muted orange and red. The glassy acrylic surface provides a lively accompaniment to the lusciously textured brushwork. Adding further three-dimensionality to each canvas are the succulent acrylic impasto accents that have become a signature trademark of his style.

Jussi Goman
Jussi Goman
Runner, 2025 
Acrylic on canvas, 80 cm x 70 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Jussi Goman. Courtesy Helsinki Contemprary

Jussi Goman
Jussi Goman
Monolith, 2025 
Acrylic on canvas, 170 cm x 145 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Jussi Goman. Courtesy Helsinki Contemprary

Jussi Goman
Jussi Goman
Meanwhile Elsewhere, 2025 
Acrylic on canvas, 145 cm x 170 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Jussi Goman. Courtesy Helsinki Contemprary

Jussi Goman
Jussi Goman
Gathering, 2025 
Acrylic on canvas, 145 cm x 170 cm
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
© Jussi Goman. Courtesy Helsinki Contemprary


Jussi Goman draws inspiration both from mythology and everyday life. The creatures appearing in his compositions are reminiscent of the mischievous beasts in Aesop’s animal fables, beloved pets, or birds foraging in the garden. Whichever the case may be, the underlying idea is the same: greatness comes in small details, and every moment contains eternity. After all, the ancient Egyptians worshipped the sacred scarab, the lowly beetle that spends its day rolling balls of dung. Often it is the case that something we find instantly recognisable or makes us smile contains something deep and true within it. Guided by his intuition, the artist explores this territory, following an idiosyncratic path towards a goal that is initially unknown.

A shortcut, whether taken by a human or animal, is typically an unplanned path that represents the shortest or most convenient route between an origin and destination. There is a more poetic English term for a shortcut: ‘desire path’, which perfectly captures the way shortcuts are born: the best and most enduring paths are born out of desire, not by force.

‘Desire Path’ is Jussi Goman’s first solo exhibition at Helsinki Contemporary. He has previously appeared at Helsinki Contemporary together with Santeri Lehto and Anton Alvarez in the group exhibition ‘Not Enough Room to Swing a Cat’ (Post with a biography of Jussi Goman)

HELSINKI CONTEMPORARY
Bulevardi 10 - 00120 Helsinki

29/03/25

Eeva-Riitta Eerola @ Helsinki Contemporary Gallery - "C" Exhibition

Eeva-Riitta Eerola: C
Helsinki Contemporary
11 April - 4 May 2025

Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Vessel (Garden) IV, 2025
Acrylic on canvas, 90 cm x 90 cm
Photo: Erno Enkenberg
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Vessel (Garden) III, 2025
Oil on acrylic on canvas, 46 cm x 50 cm
Photo: Erno Enkenberg
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

EEVA-RIITTA EEROLAs paintings seem to materialize like apparitions, exuding effortless simplicity, but also a sense of potency. Echoing her desire to simplify, Eeva-Riitta Eerola has named her new exhibition after a single letter of the alphabet: C. This emblem can be read in many ways: as a visual symbol, as a phoneme, or even as a word. Visually, its shape both encloses and opens outwards, recalling the phase of the lunar cycle when the Moon is visible only as a narrow crescent. In ancient carvings, the map of the Garden of Eden is inscribed as a fertile crescent at the confluence of four rivers, or as a rounded vessel containing paradise.

Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Observer (Garden) III, 2025
Oil on acrylic on canvas, 42 cm x 33 cm
Photo: Erno Enkenberg
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Act (Garden) IV, 2025
Oil on acrylic on canvas, 50 cm x 80 cm
Photo: Erno Enkenberg
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Abstracted maps, streams and paths are among the prominent recurring elements in Eerola’s paintings, as are hands and eyes. The eye motif is significant in that the letter ‘C’ can represent the English verb ‘to see’, or its imperative form. Eerola’s paintings invite our gaze to roam and for us to immerse ourselves experientially. The eye and the hand can be interpreted as symbolizing the painting process: when painting is reduced to its basic essentials, the gaze and the manual gesture are the painter’s most important tools.

Eeva-Riitta Eerola’s paintings engage in close study of the way we humans experience images. She is interested in exploring painting’s ability to convey an experience of spatiality and presence. In her new exhibition, spatial experiences are conveyed through images of gardens. Eerola’s gardens are semi-abstract, however, representing more of a conceptual and symbolic space than a physical one.

Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Eeva-Riitta Eerola
Courtesy of Helsinki Contemporary

Eerola’s practice also reflects her interest in the history of painting. In the exhibition C, Eeva-Riitta Eerola has drawn inspiration from symbolism, an historic art movement that used symbolic images to suggest emotions and universal human experiences. She first became interested in symbolism after experiencing a death in her family as a teenager. What especially drew her to symbolism was its compelling manner of invoking death, life, continuity, finality and infinity. While preparing for this exhibition, Eeva-Riitta Eerola took inspiration from a beloved painting of her youth, The Garden of Death (1896) by Hugo Simberg, a small-scale depiction of skeletons tenderly caring for uncanny flowers in a garden situated somewhere between the living and the dead.

HELSINKI CONTEMPORARY
Bulevardi 10 - 00120 Helsinki

28/03/25

Emma Helle @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Dress Codes for Rivers" Exhibition

Emma Helle: Dress Codes for Rivers
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki
March 28 – May 4, 2025

Emma Helle has drawn inspiration for the reclining figures in her new sculptures from personified river deities she has encountered on her travels, most recently in Roman fountains. Like many cities, Rome was founded on a river, for flowing water is literally the source of all life, but also a symbolic fount of fertility and prosperity. Throughout history, rivers have transported not only people and goods, but also thoughts and new ideas. Rome’s fountains pay tribute to the river running through the city and to the life-sustaining power of water.

In ancient Greek mythology, the father of all rivers was Oceanus, a bearded man with bull horns. Oceanus lost one horn in battle, which became the mythical horn of plenty, symbol of fertility and abundance. In Helle’s sculptures, the horn of plenty has emptied its contents all over the voluptuous, hedonistic figures, which are decked in flowers, vines, fruit, gilding and all manner of lavish details. The figures defy categorization, blending inseparably with their surroundings. Shaped from clay transported by flowing water, they are raw, imperfect, and coarsely textured, yet their surfaces shimmer in vibrant colors. They proclaim freedom and the right to revel in their inherent materiality.

Throughout art history, exotic fruits and plants have symbolized abundance, but also wealth and power. Helle’s sculptures seem to question what these symbols mean today, as they are are available to everyone on supermarket shelves. How have visual symbols of wealth and abundance changed in modern times, and who ultimately has the right to wield them?

Emma Helle (b.1979) is a graduate of the Academy of Fine Arts. Her work is held in collections including HAM Helsinki Art Museum Ham, the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, the State Art Deposit Collection, Sara Hildén Art Museum, Saastamoinen Foundation and Wihuri Foundation. She recently held a solo exhibition at Turku Art Museum, and she has participated in group exhibitions at the Boston Museum of Fine Art, the National Museum in Stockholm, Mänttä Art Festival, Helsinki Art Hall and EMMA – Espoo Museum of Modern Art.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

Stig Baumgartner @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Pyramid and Superego" Exhibition

Stig Baumgartner 
Pyramid and Superego 
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki 
March 28 – May 4, 2025 

The title of Stig Baumgartner’s new exhibition, Pyramid and Superego, alludes to hierarchical structures. The vibrantly colorful geometrical structures in his paintings are like monuments placed upon pedestals, some of them proudly balanced, others wobbly and imperfect. The artist describes monuments as images of social order; in his paintings, they embody either stability or turmoil.

Stig Baumgartner’s paintings typically possess a human or corporeal presence. Their architectural composition can be interpreted as mirroring the structures of the human mind or the concept of being human. Baumgartner’s art characteristically presents dialogues of opposites, combining expressive, calligraphic brushwork with precise, harmonious composition.

In the making of this exhibition, Stig Baumgartner found himself reflecting on artistic expression and career trajectory as a kind of monument in its own right. Work by work, the artist builds an increasingly sophisticated and unique structure of expression. At the apex shines a liberated peak that is built upon earlier works, both artist's own and those of other artists, and also upon the traditions of evolving art discourses. Each painting is always a unique event that combines acquired knowledge with personal experience. Artistic expression is invariably built upon a foregoing legacy, which can be either a burden or a liberation. Leaning towards the latter interpretation, Baumgartner hopes that his paintings will retain their ambiguous character as autonomous artistic creations.

Stig Baumgartner (b.1969) works in the tradition of abstract painting, paying homage to its legacy while at the same time boldly renewing it. Alongside his artistic practice, he is also a long-time lecturer in drawing and perception at the Academy of Fine Arts, the University of the Arts Helsinki. He completed his doctoral degree in 2015. Stig Baumgartner’s paintings are held in many of Finland’s most prestigious collections, including Saastamoinen Foundation and the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

23/03/25

Iria Leino @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - An undeservedly forgotten and undervalued artistic estate

Iria Leino
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki
March 28 – May 4, 2025

Galerie Forsblom has been granted the rare opportunity to explore an undeservedly forgotten and undervalued artistic estate in which history is palpably present. The gallery presents an exhibition featuring IRIA LEINO, a pioneer of the 1960s New York art scene and a figure enigmatic to contemporary audiences.

Iria Leino (1932-2022) was a Helsinki-born artist and fifties supermodel who made her mark as a pioneer of abstract art. At the height of her international modelling career, she left the fashion world to settle in New York’s SoHo, where she forged an exceptional career as an abstract expressionist. Her artistic journey reflected the cultural and artistic upheavals of New York in the 1960s.

Iria Leino combines the influences of Color Field painting with a meditative style of brushwork. After surviving a serious accident in 1968, she turned to Buddhism, which added a spiritual dimension to her artistic practice. Exemplifying this spiritualism is The Elephant Series, in which elephants symbolize wisdom and enlightenment. Leino’s exhibitions were well received by contemporary critics, who praised her innovative, norm-defying style of abstract expressionism.

Iria Leino’s meditative approach to painting is epitomized by The Dreamings Series (1988-1989), in which spiritual dimensions are invoked by colorful arches and dotted details. Leino was a reclusive figure whose one-of-a-kind serial oeuvre owes its existence to her dedication to solitude and spiritual guidance. Leino fused elements of Finnish nature and design with the traditions of American abstract expressionism to create an enduring legacy that is unique in art history.

Iria Leino surrendered herself to a life of solitude, meditation, and the guidance of a spiritual guru, enabling her to perfect her idiom through steadfast dedication to painting serially. By interweaving cross-cultural influences – Finnish nature and design with American traditions of abstraction – she created an unprecedented legacy shared by Finland and the United States.

Related Post on Wanafoto:
Iria Leino: 1968–1970, Harper's, New York, September 4 – October 19, 2024

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

07/03/25

Sanna Kannisto @ Helsinki Contemporary - "Gestures" Photography Exhibition

Sanna Kannisto: Gestures
Helsinki Contemporary 
14 March - 6 April 2025

Sanna Kannisto - Photography
SANNA KANNISTO
Sunflower, 2023
Pigment ink print
120 x 90 cm, edition of 7
Further option: 81 x 61 cm
© Sanna Kannisto / Courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Sanna Kannisto - Photography
SANNA KANNISTO
Preening
© Sanna Kannisto / Courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Sanna Kannisto - Photography
SANNA KANNISTO
Oriolus oriolus
© Sanna Kannisto / Courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Sanna Kannisto’s latest exhibition explores the gestures and unique personalities of birds through photography. Her avian photography is distinctive for her unusual technique of constructing field studios in natural settings. While shooting, she is attuned to the birds’ gestures, postures, and expressive presence. “Certain moments make photography meaningful to me, such as when a bird chirps, flutters its wings, grooms itself, cleans its beak, cranes its neck, competes for a place on the perch, peers at me with a certain look in its eye, or nestles up against a companion,” describes the artist.

Sanna Kannisto’s art engages in commentary with the history of portraiture, the still life genre, and traditions of scientific representation. Her photographs are the combined outcome of meticulous planning, surprise and chance. Some of her compositions are ‘hand-crafted’, combining multiple images or different moments in time. The thing that has always intrigued her about photography is the tension between reality and photographic representation. In the final stages of creating an image, Sanna Kannisto describes herself as striving to strike a balance between the natural and the artificial, or “constructs of naturalness”. “When I compose an image, I also construct a narrative, and the viewer then completes the story in their imagination,” says the artist.

Sanna Kannisto - Photography
SANNA KANNISTO
Garrulus glandarius
pigment ink-print maple frame, museum glass
1/7 - 61 x 81 cm
© Sanna Kannisto / Courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Sanna Kannisto - Photography
SANNA KANNISTO
Asio otus
© Sanna Kannisto / Courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

The exhibition’s title, Gestures, reflects the artist’s interest in the relationships between birds and their means of communication. A Japanese study published last year revealed that birds communicate using symbolic gestures. The Japanese Tit (Parus minor) flutters its wings in a particular way to signal an invitation for its mate to enter the nest first, suggesting that birds understand abstract messages on a level previously unrecognized by humans. Another study has revealed that the male starling is able to anticipate its mate’s specific appetites and bring the female the exact treats she desires. Birds are scientifically proven to have highly developed social skills. Studies even suggest that birds might possess a ‘theory of mind’, as they appear to be capable of making a distinction between their own mental states and those of others.

Sanna Kannisto Portrait
SANNA KANNISTO
© Sanna Kannisto / Courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Sanna Kannisto has been photographing birds in Finland and around the world for over a decade, offering her unique insights on the acceleration of environmental change. The past ten years have seen a drastic decline in bird populations all over the world, including Finland. The crested tit – the species portrayed in one of Kannisto’s diptychs – was formerly an endangered species, but is now on the critically endangered list. In her recent works, Sanna Kannisto has expanded her avian menagerie to challenging new species such as crows, owls, woodpeckers, hawks, bee-eaters and swallows. During her field work, she collaborates with ornithologists and bird ringers. She has received permission for her projects from the Finnish Centre for Economic Development, Transport and the Environment. The birds featured in Gestures were photographed in Finland and Italy.

HELSINKI CONTEMPORARY
Bulevardi 10, 00120 Helsinki

20/02/25

Liisa Pesonen @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Same But Different" Exhibition

Liisa Pesonen
Same But Different
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki
February 21 – March 23, 2025

Liisa Pesonen’s new paintings feature recurring motifs vaguely reminiscent of a vase. In terms of content, they can be interpreted as inheriting the legacy of still life painting. Despite their identifiable subject, most of Pesonen’s paintings are centered on structural elements, such as the dynamic relationship between lines, planes, forms and colors. That said, the artist never treats her paintings as pure studies of form, but rather as an inquiry into the meanings that emerge from interactions of compositional elements.

Pesonen’s paintings are variations of an ongoing dialogue played out between the subject and the background. What the artist initially conceives as a vase might be transformed into a rectangle or a linear configuration. Her paintings are characterized by their seemingly endless alternation between representation and abstraction, dialogues between static form and dynamic drawn lines, and interplays of spontaneous expression and meticulous control. At the heart of her practice, she often returns to the same question: Where exactly is the subject located in the painting? Is it the representational form of the vase, or is it hidden in the textures of the drawn lines? Even when the subject is a recognizable object, Liisa Pesonen never exclusively depicts the object for its own sake, but rather as an interpretation of something that can only be expressed through the language of painting or drawing. Sometimes her vases are like anthropomorphic figures that briefly leap off the background, only to disappear again the next moment.

Liisa Pesonen (b. 1962) is a graduate of the Academy of Fine Arts, and her work is represented in many private and public collections, including those of the City of Helsinki, the State Art Deposit Collection, the City of Jyväskylä, Wihuri Foundation and Pori Art Museum. She has had many solo exhibitions and she has participated in group exhibitions at the Lönnström Art Museum, Pori Art Museum, and the Mänttä Art Festival.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

17/02/25

Artist Kerttu Saali @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Lightbeams and a Blizzard" Exhibition

Kerttu Saali 
Lightbeams and a Blizzard 
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki
February 21 – March 23, 2025

KERTTU SAALI (b. 1994)  has adopted a darker palette and more intense style of expression in her latest paintings. Her characteristic curvilinear shapes and twisting lines stretch across the canvas, alternately converging and diverging to form abstract compositions, or “sites”, as the artist describes them. Her burgeoning shapes spill outside the canvas, taking on a three-dimensional, sculptural form as they merge with the picture frame, creating contrasts between the solidity of the wood and the ethereal, painterly elements. Saali’s paintings suggest nature’s cycles and growth processes, as if they were mimicking nature rather than just representing it. Their sensual quality invites the viewer to experience them holistically. The sense of sight awakens the other senses, invoking sounds, smells, and tactile experiences in the viewer’s imagination.

Chlorophyll-scented, saturated greens engage in dialogue with translucent blues and whites, telling two sides of the same story. Kerttu Saali chooses her colors intuitively, letting the composition unfold spontaneously as she strives to capture a particular feeling or mood that the colors awaken in her. She begins with mid-tones and steadily progresses in two directions, adding layers of darker and lighter tones, simultaneously adding brightness and moving deeper into shadow.

Even Saali’s white paintings are never entirely monochromatic; the viewer’s eye is drawn to subtle tonal variations that evoke wintry landscapes and northern nature, resonating with subconscious memories of Finnish art history. Kerttu Saali in fact describes the imprints on the canvas as “memory traces”. When she paints, she never analyzes what the traces mean: her creative expression emanates from a total sense of freedom, drawing inspiration from everything the artist has seen and experienced.

KERTTU SAALI graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts in 2023. She has exhibited in numerous group shows in Finland and internationally, and her work is held in many private and public collections, including those of the Vantaa Art Museum, the HUS Art Collection, the City of Tampere and Saastamoinen Foundation. The artist lives and works in Helsinki.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

16/12/24

Leena Nio - Exhibition @ Helsinki Contemporary - "Dwellers"

Leena Nio: Dwellers
Helsinki Contemporary
10 January - 2 February 2025

Leena Nio
Crowded I, 2024
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Oil on canvas, 170 cm x 150 cm
© Leena Nio, courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Leena Nio
Composition with a red dress shirt and yellow 
handmade sweater, 2023-2024
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Oil on canvas, 170 cm x 150 cm
© Leena Nio, courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Leena Nio’s practice is underpinned by the pleasure of painting and looking. As she paints, she surrenders herself to the magic of colour and an abundance of details and intertwined brushstrokes. She plays with tensions between concealment and exposure, the personal and the universal, and juxtapositions of contrasting textures.

Leena Nio’s latest exhibition consists of still life compositions capturing scenes of quotidian daily existence. Many are composed around a laundry basket, a mundane household item that is rarely celebrated in art, yet nevertheless an object in which there is beauty, softness and nuances to be discovered. A human presence is suggested indirectly through cropped fragments of garments and laundry.

Leena Nio’s complexly layered paintings straddle between abstraction and representation. Things hidden behind façades are central to her recent paintings, many of which literally contain peepholes evoking the duality of daily existence: behind the public façade is a private world that is revealed only to one’s closest loved ones. Fluffy jumpers and other items of clothing appear as recurring symbols of the softening buffers that we erect between ourselves and external reality.

Leena Nio’s layered paintings bring to light the interconnected nature of reality. As if braiding hair or knitting strands of woollen yarn, she visually juxtaposes and interweaves meticulously executed details, inviting viewers to reflect on the inextricable oneness of the objects, people, and other living beings in our lives.

Leena Nio’s paintings seem to ponder the way our lives unfold almost like a series of still life compositions. An object such as a laundry basket is a theatre stage upon which we perform our daily existence in an ever-changing procession of clothing, while we ourselves observe this theatre of life as onlookers in the sidelines.

HELSINKI CONTEMPORARY
Bulevardi 10, 00120 Helsinki

06/12/24

Heidi Lampenius @ Helsinki Contemporary - "Ground Color" Exhibition

Heidi Lampenius: Ground Color
Helsinki Contemporary
22 November - 21 December 2024

Heidi Lampenius
Stairs I, 2024
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Clay paint on canvas, 200 cm x 130 cm
© Heidi Lampenius, courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Heidi Lampenius
Stairs II, 2024
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Clay paint on canvas, 200 cm x 130 cm
© Heidi Lampenius, courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Heidi Lampenius
Stairs IV, 2024
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Clay paint on canvas, 200 cm x 195 cm
© Heidi Lampenius, courtesy Helsinki Contemporary

Heidi Lampenius
Color Chart I, 2024
Photo: Jussi Tiainen
Clay paint on canvas, 165 cm x 165 cm
© Heidi Lampenius, courtesy Helsinki Contemporary
“I like the way the paint glistens when it is wet, like dew-kissed mornings, but when it is dry, the colours become muted as the clay enfolds them in its own harmonious palette. Here lies the secret, the secret of the clay, the secret of the earth, conveying a sense of everything invisible in nature that we feel but cannot see.”

- Heidi Lampenius
Ground Color presents new clay paintings by Heidi Lampenius. They reprise her signature symbolic language of painting that is based on the natural sciences and her experience of nature. The title of the exhibition is ambiguous: ‘ground’ can mean ‘earth’, but it can also refer to the surface used for painting. In this exhibition, earth serves as the ‘ground’ both conceptually and literally.

In her past paintings, Heidi Lampenius gave a visible form to invisible natural phenomena such as wavelengths of sound and light. The artist’s new explorations in clay reflect her quest for a new sense of groundedness – her desire to return to tangible basics. The paintings in the exhibition are composed around simple geometrical shapes that enclose folds and diagrams. Her abstract paintings conceptually represent her investigations into the hidden world of clay. While her forms are angular, there is great tenderness to her painting style and tonal scale.

The artist’s enduring themes – time, nature and memory – are revisited in series such as Stairs, in which the viewer can make out the shape of stairs simultaneously leading up and down, and in multiple directions all at once. For Heidi Lampenius, stairs symbolize harmonious cycles, their circular movement representing reassuring continuity and harmony  –  an endless cycle where what is at the ‘top’ and at the ‘bottom’ are inextricably linked.

Clay paint has the special quality of being temporally layered. Earth minerals are among the oldest pigments known to humankind. Clays, ochres, and earth and mineral pigments are born through cycles of elements spanning vast expanses of time. Heidi Lampenius thus takes the viewer on a long journey across peatlands, fields and bedrock, through millennia of folklore, and through geological epochs stretching far back beyond human history.

HELSINKI CONTEMPORARY
Bulevardi 10, 00120 Helsinki

22/11/24

Hannu Väisänen @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Rose Window" Exhibition

Hannu Väisänen: Rose Window
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki
November 29, 2024 – January 12, 2025

A compositional scheme structured around an off-center circle is the uniting feature of the paintings in Hannu Väisänen’s latest exhibition. The artist describes his new works using the term tondo, which refers to a circular painting or relief. Tondi was popular, especially in high Renaissance painting, but Hannu Väisänen draws his inspiration from a very different source. Circular compositions have grown familiar to him through his many years of painting and decorating plates and bowls. He finds the round form inspiring, especially as plates are not intended to be viewed from any specific direction: they are always viewed in the round. In this new series of paintings, Hannu Väisänen rotated each piece several times during the painting process to decide which would be top and bottom. Although each tondo is sketched many times on paper before being transferred to canvas, Hannu Väisänen consciously avoids creating perfect circles drawn with a compass.

Hannu Väisänen’s paintings refer indirectly to nature, their shapes and colors drawing inspiration from coral reefs, mossy surfaces, the belly skin of a stingray, or the tail a peacock spider performing a courtship dance. Although his compositions are rooted in nature and its wondrous details, his paintings are never purely representational. Instead, they consciously blur the line between the abstract and the figurative. With circular compositions constituting a leitmotif in his new series of paintings, it seemed only natural for Hannu Väisänen to also include paintings of rose windows found in cathedral façades. Hannu Väisänen originally sketched the rose windows at Rouen Cathedral, which is famous for its flamboyant Gothic façade, a subject also interpreted by many Impressionists.

Hannu Väisänen (b.1951) is a multi-talented artist who moves fluently between working as a visual artist, writer, stage designer, costume designer, director and illustrator. His work is found in numerous Finnish public collections, and he has created public artworks on commission for clients, including the Finnish National Opera, Kontula Church, and Oulu Cathedral. The multi-award-winning artist is the recipient of the State Prize for Visual Arts, the Finlandia Prize for Literature in 2007, and the State Prize for Literature in 2015. Hannu Väisänen lives and works in the southwest of France.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

Kristina Riska @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Uncertainties" Exhibition

Kristina Riska: Uncertainties
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki
November 29, 2024 – January 12, 2025

Kristina Riska’s artistic process harnesses both the delicate malleability and the willful nature of clay. The artist describes herself as battling her material, attempting to achieve the impossible, which is why she was unsure until the last minute before the show’s opening how many of her sculptures would survive intact. When working with clay, one must humble oneself before the material – clay insists upon writing its own narrative. Its size and shape are transformed during firing in the kiln, as are the textures and colors imparted by glazes, thus conferring a key role to chance in the birthing process of ceramic art.

As an entirely new feature in Riska’s art, many of her recent sculptures are propped on struts, some resembling Japanese wooden geta sandals, others rounder like wheels or pompoms. By resting her sculptures on inbuilt pedestals, Kristina Riska has freed up wholly new avenues of expression in her construction of form. Each sculpture tells its own mini-story, and the titles hint at the underlying meanings in subtle, oblique ways. Instead of having a clear uniting theme, the sculptures in this exhibition were created intuitively, in states of mind ranging from joy to sorrow. They are richly diverse in style, yet each one has a counterpart or companion piece with which it engages in dialogue, creating cohesion within the exhibition.

Working with clay is just as inspiring to Kristina Riska today as it was forty years ago. She describes it as a huge privilege and gift. At the heart of her process is her desire to distill her craft to its purest essence – to strip everything down to the essentials and achieve total integrity of expression. While immersed in a project, she avoids looking at the work of other artists and strives to concentrate purely on her own creative process.

Kristina Riska (b. 1960) is one of Finland’s most internationally renowned ceramic artists. Her studio is based on the premises of the Arabia Art Department Society in Helsinki. She has won international awards and has exhibited her work everywhere, from the United States to Denmark and Japan. Her sculptures are held in numerous international private collections, as well as the collections of the Saastamoinen Foundation and the Finnish and Swedish governments.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

19/11/24

Artist Kristo Saarikoski @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Wishing Well" Exhibition

Kristo Saarikoski: Wishing Well
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki
November 29, 2024 – January 12, 2025

Certain desires are so deeply personal and fragile that they are difficult to share with others. The title of Kristo Saarikoski’s exhibition, Wishing Well, meditates on this very human form of vulnerability that exists within all of us – a side we rarely reveal to outsiders. Throwing a coin into a wishing well is a beautiful metaphorical gesture symbolizing the sharing of something intimately personal, like whispering a secret into the ear of a dear friend. We all have hopes and dreams – they form our inner core, a core shaped by life experiences that are built layer upon layer over passing years, planting the seeds of desires that express both our hopes for the future and aspects of the past we wish to leave behind.

One of the themes explored by Kristo Saarikoski is the dream of parenthood. As painting is an idiom that is fundamentally untranslatable into words, how can something like a parent’s desire to protect their child be expressed in the language of brushstrokes? Kristo Saarikoski paints intuitively, without any preliminary sketching. The process might begin with a color or combination of hues from which the rest of the composition unfolds spontaneously. The artist rotates his canvas many times during the painting process, searching for clues that lead him toward the final form. All his paintings are characterized by monochromatic areas contained within the larger composition as perspective-defying spaces.

Icon painting traditions are another underlying source of inspiration in Kristo Saarikoski’s work. After taking icon painting classes, the artist noticed that his paintings had changed: they now carry deeper meanings beyond just aesthetic concerns. Some of his paintings employ the strappo (detachment) technique, which literally involves the removal of pigment-bearing layers from a wall painting and transferring them to canvas.

Kristo Saarikoski (b. 1992) graduated from the Free Art School in Helsinki in 2024. He has had several solo and group exhibitions in Finland. His work is held in the HUS Collection, the Pentti Sären Collection and the Finnish Artists' Association Collection. The artist lives and works in Helsinki.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki

07/11/24

Tuukka Tammisaari @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki - "Tuukka Tammisaari: Things in the Wind" Exhibition

Tuukka Tammisaari: Things in the Wind
Galerie Forsblom, Heksinki 
October 25 - November 24, 2024

Tuukka Tammisaari’s highly recognizable signature style radiates a sincere joy that stems from the pure freedom of creativity and his intuitive approach to painting. Every inch of the canvas exudes his powerful candor of expression, penetrating all the way to the viewer’s subconscious.

Tuukka Tammisaari’s oil paintings present a multi-layered world that is simultaneously anchored  in the context of both art history and contemporary art. His visual vocabulary is rich in expressive devices familiar from neo-expressionism and minimalism, as well as dialogues between abstraction and representation.

Tuukka Tammisaari describes his paintings as inventories of myriad ideas, events, stories and emotions. The imaginative medley of elements that unfold across his canvases bears witness to his tremendous expressive intensity. His art has a multi-layered anatomy crowned by the artist’s distinctive palette of inflected earthy hues. His compositions are surprising in their orderly anarchy, the compositional principle often being based precisely on its non-linearity and lack of logic.

Tuukka Tammisaari (b. 1984) studied painting at Helsinki’s Academy of Fine Arts and the Lahti Institute of Design and Fine Arts. He has held solo exhibitions in Finland, Denmark, Belgium and the USA. Hi work is found in the collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, the Nelimarkka Museum, Uppsala County, and Leiden Medical University in the Netherlands, as well as in private collections in Finland, Denmark, the United States, the Netherlands, Belgium and Sweden. The artist lives and works in Helsinki.

GALERIE FORSBLOM, HELSINKI
Yrjönkatu 22, 00120 Helsinki