Happy Walpurgisnacht

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“Ah, it’s May Eve”, I wrote last year, “Almost anywhere else on the planet this would not be so very significant, but in Finland it means “Vappu”, a kind of Finnish “Mardi Gras meets the Rite of Spring”, with some historical political overtones and a strong youth and student flavouring. With the time difference, the party has been underway for awhile and will carry on into May Day tomorrow”.

I’m not sure if other European countries make this an official holiday, but In Finland it’s a long weekend, with the spring carnival-like celebrations starting the eve of Vappu, May Day, or Walpurgisnacht and continuing into May Day tomorrow.

Because I came to Canada as a young child, I don’t remember the Vappu celebrations in Finland but did hear the stories. Here in Canada, May Day is not a significant holiday, but our very small Finnish community had our own family-centred celebrations based around the traditional food and drink, especially sima and tippaleipää. The recipes at this link look similar to the ones my mother used.

My mother made sima (pronounced see-mah) for Vappu and even much of the summer, for it’s like a sparkling lemonade suitable for the whole family. It’s low in alcohol, with only a smidge of yeast for fermenting. Raisins are added to the fermenting sugar and lemon mixture, when they rise to the surface the sima is ready. As a child I was always fascinated watching the raisins begin to float to the surface, and enjoyed these swollen fruits along with the delicious drink.

Tippaleipä (literally translated as drip bread) is similar to doughnuts but crispier because the batter is dripped into hot oil in circles to create a nest. Yum! I think it’s been decades since I’ve had sima and tippaleipää but I still remember the tastes – the taste of childhood memories.

Hauskaa Vappua, Happy May Day, Happy Walpurgisnacht! Bonne Fête du Muguet! (the reason for the photo of our just-opening lily- of-the-valley)

PS. I’ve been hoping someone would blog about May Day as International Worker’s Day – Dave at Via Negativa has written an excellent one, while baking bread!

Finnish Design exhibition

More Finnish stuff, dear readers! Friends of Finland recently sent out a notice to members about a very interesting travelling exhibition of Finnish design coming to Vancouver. (Links and photos are my additions.)

SCHOOL OF COOL – FRESH FINNISH DESIGN
 
Finnish architecture and furniture design appropriately collide in this two-in-one exhibition at Vancouver’s Pendulum Gallery from April 10-28, 2006. Arctic exoticism and Finnish icons – Alvar Aalto and the cheerful 1960s fabrics of Marimekko among them – combine with fresh youthful talent to showcase a dynamic evolution of Finnish design.

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Sonera Offices in Helsinki by SARC Architects

The first of the two exhibits, Helsinki Contemporary Urban Architecture, photographed by Jussi Tiainen, is an internationally touring photo exhibit of over 50 recent architectural projects throughout the Finnish capital. Buildings range from a small sleek sauna to international landmarks such as Heikkinen & Komonen’s new Vuotalo Cultural Centre.

Architectural enthusiasts and urban design buffs alike will be impressed by Tiainen’s ability to capture the lightness, tactility and reflectivity of each structure, while at the same time demonstrating each building’s ultimate place in the cityscape. Most recently the Washington Post dubbed Tiainen “the chronicler par excellence” of one of Europe’s best-designed cities. This exhibit is a compelling testament to the deep love for architecture and city planning in design-savvy Helsinki.

Cool Dozen is an energetic and innovative sample of the best of Finnish chair design and textile prints highlighting over 50 years of design. Among the 12 chairs is Alvar Aalto’s iconic Paimio 41 chair (1932) by Artek and current prototypes by Finland’s coolest contemporary designers including Hannu Kähönen and IMU Design Group. Marimekko textiles, past and present, are paired with each chair design. The Cool Dozen exhibit suggests a threaded evolution of Finnish furniture design – the history, icons and myths of this design-conscious nation give way to the new fresh ideas of young rising stars.

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Alvar Aalto’s Paimio 41 chair (1932)

“Finland is a country that shares with us similar hues in its green forests, blue water and snow-covered terrain. Vancouverites will find inspiration in the exhibits’ vibrant urbanity, materiality and design,” states Laura Arpiainen, architect at Hughes Condon Marler Architects, who grew up in Finland and is a graduate of Helsinki University of Technology.

Together these two exhibits form an irresistible showcase of a city and a nation’s long love affair with architecture and design.

Vancouver’s Pendulum Gallery is in the HSBC Building, 885 Georgia St. Guided tours are available Wednesdays at noon; Thursdays at 7 p.m. and Saturdays at 3 p.m.

Related links:
this exhibition was in Toronto and Ottawa, now coming to Vancouver before moving on to Beijing

Vancouver Sun announcement which included an exhibit photo (in the paper only) of Sonera Offices in Helsinki by SARC Architects

Aalto’s stacking stools and bent laminated birch chair with textile webbing

Aalto’s many chairs

Alvar Aalto Museum in Jyväskylä which we visited in 2000. It has a wide-ranging permanent exhibition of Aalto’s work on show, including the methods he developed in laminating the bentwood for his chairs.

my entry on Sacral Spaces, an earlier Finnish architecture exhibition here in Vancouver, also organized by Hughes Condon Marler Architects

my entry on Marimekko

Arno Rafael Minkkinen

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Arno Rafael Minkkinen, Self-portrait, Dead Horse Point, Utah, 1997, 20″ x 24″

I first became acquainted with Arno Rafael Minkkinen, an internationally known Finnish-American photographer through Art Daily some months ago. His works affected me deeply, and I bookmarked it for a future blog post. Now, many months later, I happened on it again, so now it’s time to share my admiration for his work.

Minkkinen was born in Finland, moved to the US as a child and now lives in Massachusetts. Since 1988, he has been a Professor of Art at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell. He has had numerous exhibitions around the world. Recently he was the subject of a mid-career retrospective at DeCordova Museum.

Saga: The Journey of Arno Rafael Minkkinen, Photographs 1970-2005 is a 120-print traveling exhibition accompanied by a new large publication.

Since the early 1970s, Minkkinen has been photographing his unclothed body in a wide variety of landscape and interior settings, from Finland to New England, from the American West to sites in Italy and France. These unmanipulated surreal and timeless black and white photographs are astonishing in the way Minkkinen maneuvers his body so that it echoes or seems to become part of the land formation. As A.D. Coleman, one of the curators of the exhibition writes, Minkkinen’s “…images comprise an account of an epic journey–both a physical adventure in the natural and urban world and a psychological voyage of the lone human spirit.”

I hope you enjoy browsing through Arno Rafael Minkkinen’s site as much as I do!

Kaija Saariaho, opera composer

Charles Downey of Ionarts wrote today:

Tonight was the big night in Paris, the world premiere of Kaija Saariaho’s new opera, Adriana Mater, at the Opéra national de Paris. It was to have been the jewel in the crown of a challenging and adventurous season of opera, the Opéra national de Paris’s commission of a new opera by the Finnish composer, whose L’Amour de Loin was such a sensation at the Salzburg Festival in 2000.

Unfortunately the premiere has been cancelled because of a strike. So, instead of commenting on the expected reviews, Ionarts wrote about the composer’s earlier works.

Thanks to this piece, I became inspired and curious to find out more about this famous Finnish woman composer that I knew very little about. Virtual Finland’s article* states that Kaija Saariaho was born in 1952 in Helsinki, and received her music education at the Sibelius Academy. She has composed numerous works since 1982 and concerts of her work have been performed at the Savonlinna Opera Festival, London, Paris,Vienna and Jakarta. She was winner of the Prix Italia, 1988 and of the Recording of the year award from the Finnish Broadcasting Company, 1993. In 2003 she was the winner of one of the world’s biggest prizes for composition, the Grawemeyer prize for 2003. Worth $200,000 US, Kaija Saariaho won it for her first opera L’Amour de Loin.

The prize means a lot because with L’Amour de Loin I stepped into a new area, after which my life and my music changed, said Saariaho in a statement. I have found from within the world of opera in all its glory. Interestingly her earlier work involved “electronics, with computer-analyzed sonorities shifting imperceptibly into new ones”, so it is indeed a big shift. Writing opera has certainly catapulted her to great fame and demand. What an amazing woman!

Now I must find me some of her recordings – L’amour de Loin sounds wonderful.

By the way, Charles Downey is quite the admirer of Finnish music, especially opera, which he has attributed to Finland’s excellent music education.

UPDATES:
April 4th, 2006: The news in Helsingin Sanomat today: Adriana Mater opera’s world première is big success in Paris. The opera premiered last night after being postponed from last Thursday.

April 5th: Ionarts reports on the mixed reviews in the French press.

April 15th: A very interesting interview with the production’s conductor, Esa-Pekka Salonen (by Shirley Apthorp, Bloomberg News). Despite an enthusiastic response from the public, the French press response was not glowing. “Everything is political in Paris,” Salonen says. “To damn this opera is to take a swipe at Mortier. And here you had a Lebanese librettist, a Finnish composer and an American director coming to Paris to do an opera at the country’s national house . . .”

Thanks again to ionarts!

* link has expired and has been removed

Toronto’s Lord of the Rings

lotrwallpaper_thumb.jpgThe much-anticipated musical theatre version of The Lord of the Rings made its formal début in a gala première in Toronto on Thursday evening, and the reactions of the audience suggested that the massive production would not be leaving town very soon.

From the Finnish point of view Toronto’s The Lord of the Rings production is particularly interesting, with its strong Karelian-tinged songs composed by the Finnish folk group Värttinä.

“Just as in Tolkien’s original work, music has a greater role in the stage adaption than it had in Peter Jackson’s highly successful film trilogy. The “Finnish connection” is not altogether a coincidence: Tolkien often referred to his own personal debt to the myths of the Finnish national epic Kalevala.” (from Helsingin Sanomat International*)

I’ve been waiting to hear more about this since first reading about the Finnish connection, and then learning that the debut would be in Toronto. Well, it has received mixed reviews in both the CBC* and the Globe and Mail*. I wonder if the expectations might be too high after the films, even the book.

Still, I wish I was closer to Toronto to go see this production. And that reminds me, I still haven’t seen all of the films and I must reread the book after 20 years or so. Ah time, time…

ADDENDUM March 28th: Here’s more from Helsingin Sanomat*: “Finger of fate pointed Lord of the Rings music towards Finland; Värttinä discovered largely by chance to compose the music for Toronto production”.

* Updated 27.08.2015 – expired links removed

WOMAN

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(image scanned from invitation – designed by Andrew Cairns)

WOMAN is an art exhibition in celebration of International Women’s Day at the Ferry Building Gallery, 1414 Argyle Ave, in West Vancouver, BC. The opening reception is tonight, Tuesday, March 7th, 6-8 pm. The exhibition continues to March 26th, 2006 – Hours: 10-6pm Tuesday – Sunday

Thirty-three artists’ works are featured, including that of Jean Morrison.

I admit I’m not much of an activist but I like this kind of event to recognize women! International Women’s Day is on March 8th and is celebrated in Canada from March 5th to 11th, 2006.

ADDENDUM: On a related and very interesting note, haihatus, a Finnish artist’s blog, has reminded me that women in Finland have had the right to vote for 100 years as of this year! Finland was not yet an independent country one hundred years ago, but a duchy of Russia. Here’s some of that history.*

(*Link expired and deleted)

slide show: aurora borealis

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Ooh, there’s a truly outstanding and beautiful slide show of the Aurora Borealis at Virtual Finland* (from where I’ve borrowed this photo)!

Finland is a leader in the study of the Aurora Borealis, the majestic display of colours that adorns the northern sky. The hub of auroral science is the Sodankylä Geophysical Observatory, SGO, in northern Finland, a centre of excellence in geophysics and related disciplines. Experts share their knowledge with Virtual Finland visitors, explaining fact and fiction regarding this cosmic wonder. And when you see our sensational images you’ll know why this is VF’s number one site, with millions of visitors around the globe.

Go see the slide show* and then read the accompanying fascinating articles.

The aurora was the subject of an earlier blog post here.

**Sadly, the links have since expired and are thus removed.

photos of Finland

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Niklas Sjöblom photo, February 6, 2006

I have a few longer blog posts that I have been wanting to write for some time but have been busy and then too tired to organize my thoughts and research. So, instead I’ll be lazy and point to a couple of interesting photography links that I think you will enjoy.

Niklas Sjöblom’s photoblog Under the Open Sky has won acclaim for the stunningly beautiful, almost daily photos taken of the changing seasons, usually around Helsinki.

The second site is presently featured on Virtual Finland’s* front page, and is a hauntingly beautiful slide show of Icebreakers in the Baltic Sea.

*Virtual Finland has been replaced by ‘This is Finland’ but most links will not transfer though we are lucky the above one does.

Finnish ice flowers

In today’s meanderings amongst some favourite Finnish bloggers, my eyes popped at the sight of some absolutely gorgeous photos of frost flowers on ikkunaiines’** windows. The pictures speak for themselves without language. There are lots more on her photoblog. All her photographs are truly beautiful, so do have a look.

There are some obvious advantages to a colder climate as you can see if you compare these to the much more subdued frost patterns here in Vancouver, captured on Dec. 5th, 2004 and Nov. 14th, 2005. I remember many beautiful ones on my bedroom window in my childhood home in Winnipeg, a place which can be colder than Finland!

Artist Merja, author of taidettako? has a beautiful photo of her frost flowers! And, children’s book author Anna Amnell, aka ‘blogisisko’** has just joined in with hers. I love the juxtaposition with the orchids. Go look!

Jan. 22nd: More flowers blooming in Finland where they are having a very cold snap – here is Kapa’s window. He is an artist-photographer in Jyväskylä, Finland with an impressive exhibition history, including one he’s in right now in his hometown.

** expired links which have been removed

weird habits meme

This meme has been going around many Finnish blogs and now I’ve been tagged by SIKURI (written by a Finnish-American blogger and writer, formerly sananlaskija). I’ll do mine in English to open the field since so many Finns that I read have already taken up the challenge.

I’m to list five weird habits of mine and to challenge other bloggers to do the same.

1. I am an artist and a printmaker (what’s that?), who also uses the computer in image making (is that art?).
2. I am a blogger (what’s that?) and addicted to it.
3. I love my computer (they’ve always been Macs) – how geeky.
4. I can’t read, write, or do arithmetic if there’s talk around me.
5. I can’t cook in a messy kitchen. (My family can tell you about my complaints about their bread crumbs and dirty dishes left on the counter.)

Anyone out there want to take up the challenge – c’mon!? Send me a comment when you join in.

Jan.18th: Artist Elise Tomlinson has just posted her 5 weirdest habits!

Jan.19th: And here is new art-blogger Daniel North joining in! Welcome, I’m pleased to meet you! I really like what you say about the international connection, “as more of an interactive art project, plus …the fact that it has crossed the Atlantic”.

ADDENDUM: I’m thinking now how great it is that I’ve gotten comments on this from artists and writers, and two artists have taken up the challenge and posted on their blogs, and wouldn’t it be a great interactive project (as Daniel called it) if more artist bloggers joined in? I started out taking this quite lightly, perhaps a bit flippantly, by referring to my being an artist, printmaker, blogger and computer nut as weird habits – that is from the perspective of people who are not into these activities and don’t understand or appreciate those who do. But here on the internet I have met so many people who are all of these and we understand each other, so I’m not weird at all! Nevertheless I do have some weird habits I’m sure, even if I don’t realize that! Anyways, I’ll stop rambling on, and call out to more artists and writers and of course any bloggers to write about your weird habits. If you are reading this and live outside North America and Finland (where it began), please join in and make this a truly international interactive project.

Jan 21st: Read Printfreak’s list!

Jan.25th: And another great one from Anna of Self-Winding!