Akseli Gallen-Kallela
(1865–1931), was a Finnish painter,
graphic artist, designer, and architect, his country's most famous
artist and a major figure in the
Art Nouveau
and
Symbolist
movements. He was born in Pori and studied in Helsinki and then in
Paris (1884–9, notably at the Académie Julian). In 1894
he settled at Ruovesi in central Finland, where he designed his own
home and studio (1894–5) in a romantic vernacular style,
together with its furnishings. He traveled widely, however, and was
well-known outside his own country, particularly in
Germany (he had a joint exhibition with
Munch
in Berlin in 1895 and exhibited with
Die Brücke
in Dresden in 1910). In 1911–13 he built a new home and studio
for himself at Tarvaspää near Helsinki (now a museum
dedicated to him). Gallen-Kallela was deeply patriotic (he volunteered
to fight in the War of Independence against Russia in 1918, even though
he was in his 50s) and he was inspired mainly by the landscape and
folklore of his country, above all by the Finnish national epic Kalevala
(‘Land of Heroes’).
His early work was in the 19th-century naturalistic
tradition, but in the 1890s he developed a flatter, more stylized manner,
well suited to the depiction of heroic myth, with bold simplifications
of form, strong outlines, and vivid — sometimes rather garish
— colors. Apart from easel paintings, Gallen-Kallela did a number
of murals for public buildings (including the Finnish National Museum,
Helsinki, 1928). His work also included book illustrations (notably for
an edition of Kalevala, 1922) and designs for stained glass, fabrics,
and jewelry. He is regarded not only as his country's greatest painter,
but also as the chief figure in the creation of a distinctive Finnish
art, and he was given a funeral befitting a national hero. His son Jorma
Gallen-Kallela (1898–1939) was also a painter.