Toasting Finland’s Jean Sibelius at 150

Photo: Yehia Eweis/Finnish National Gallery Jean Sibelius, Albert Edelfelt, Akseli Gallen-Kallela, Magnus Enckell, 150th anniversary of Sibelius’s birth, 2015, festivals, events, Helsinki, Hämeenlinna, Turku, Järvenpää, Ainola, Finland Detail from Albert Edelfelt’s undated work “Composer Jean Sibelius,” part of an exhibition at Helsinki’s Ateneum Art Museum.

Finnish Music Day is held on December 8, the birthday of composer Jean Sibelius. In 2015, the 150th anniversary of his birth is celebrated all year with events in Finland and around the world, from Iceland to Swaziland.

Born in 1865, Jean Sibelius lived a long and colourful life, surviving to the age of almost 92 despite a fondness for cigars and alcohol. He published no major works after the age of 61, and is believed to have burned his nearly complete Eighth Symphony in 1945. By then he had become the best-known Nordic composer – and the world’s best-known Finn. His status is being celebrated and revisited throughout 2015.

The jubilee year kicks off on New Year’s Day in Hämeenlinna, where he lived until he was almost 20. The town also hosts exhibitions, a festival (September) and an international congress (December).

Around the world, from São Paulo, Brazil to Melbourne, Australia, hundreds of Sibelius concerts, festivals, competitions and exhibitions are being held, and myriad books and albums are being published.

In Finland, events include cellist Jussi Makkonen’s Return to the Landscapes of Sibelius’s Honeymoon. It premieres on January 18 in Järvenpää, 40 kilometres north of Helsinki, near Sibelius’s former home, Ainola, which is now a museum. A Järvenpää Art Museum show focuses on the great man’s crucial partner, his wife Aino Sibelius (March–October).

In Turku, conductor Leif Segerstam leads a Sibelius Marathon (December). In Helsinki, the National Opera stages Tero Saarinen’s choreography set to Sibelius’s symphonic choral workKullervo (February–March) and the National Museum unveils an exhibition (starting in October).

Notorious parties

Photo: Yehia Eweis/Finnish National Gallery
Magnus Enckell’s “Music” (1906) forms part of Ateneum’s exhibition drawing connections between composer Jean Sibelius and the visual art world. (Click on photo to view uncropped version.)

Helsinki’s Ateneum Art Museum displays Sibelius and the World of Art until March 22, 2015. The exhibition’s evocative multimedia experience includes famous Finnish paintings and music. 

Sibelius formed close ties to artists such as Akseli Gallen-Kallela. In the 1890s, they held notorious parties at Helsinki’s Kämp restaurant, sometimes lasting for days. Between toasts, they discussed the budding Finnish nation and the essence of art.

“Inspiration went both ways: music inspired artworks, and art inspired Sibelius,” says Anna-Maria von Bonsdorff, chief curator of the Ateneum show. “Sibelius and Gallen-Kallela shared a new concept of art,Gesamtkunstwerk [a German term meaning ‘total work of art’ or ‘all-embracing art form’], which was a leading idea within symbolism. Both were particularly inspired by the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala, from the 1880s through the 1920s.”

Sibelius was said to be gifted with synesthesia – “seeing” his own compositions and other music as visual works of art in his mind. According to his close friend and biographer Karl Ekman, “every impression of sound was transferred and fixed as colour on the retina of his eye.” Appropriately, the artwork in the show is accompanied by a tailored soundtrack, selected and sometimes played by Finnish pianist Folke Gräsbeck.

See also on thisisFINLAND

Christmas with the Sibelius family(Link to another website.)
Finnish conductor Osmo Vänskä: Sounding exactly as Sibelius intended(Link to another website.)
Finlandia by Jean Sibelius(Link to another website.)

Link

Sibelius 150: event listings(Link to another website.) (Opens New Window)

Source thisisFINLAND (Link to another website.) (Opens New Window)

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