ÄûÃʵ¼º½

News

‘Helsinki School – The Nature of Being’ group shows in Berlin and Fotografisk Copenhagen

This Summer Persons Projects / Helsinki School presents the group exhibition 'The Helsinki School – The Nature of Being' at their gallery space in Berlin and at Fotografisk Copenhagen as a part of CHART Art Fair.
Rescue devices
Anni Leppälä- Rescue Devices, 2010. Pigment print mounted on aluminum 62,5 x 84 cm. © Anni Leppälä, Courtesy of Persons Projects

, representing a selected group of photographers from Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture, opens two group exhibitions based on the latest book publication ‘The Nature of Being’, the Helsinki School series volume 6 by Hatje Cantz. 

As a part of , Persons Projects represents several female Helsinki School artists 28 – 30 August at the Fotografisk Copenhagen. CHART Art Fair is the leading contemporary art fair in the Nordics, showing in its 2020 edition only women artists from the participating galleries. Persons Projects will show a further selection of works from ‘The Nature of Being’ 27 June – 5 September in both of their spaces Lindenstr. 34 and 35 in Berlin. 

The exhibition focuses on how selected artists from the Helsinki School use their internal compass to intrinsically measure and guide their perspective in interpreting the landscape they live in. Historically, Nordic culture abides by the power generated by the changing of the four seasons. Each of these natural time periods either by its wrath or grace, notches its mark upon its passing, leaving a reminder in its wake of how fragile our human presence is within it.

water lilies
Santeri Tuori- Water Lilies #14, 2020. Pigment print, 160,5 x 219 cm. © Santeri Tuori, Courtesy of Persons Projects

The exhibition explores the nature of a landscape by conceptualizing it from an internal perspective based upon our sensibilities. In other words, how to visualize and define nature beyond the physical world of animals, plants and sunsets by using those essential qualities that characterize who we are. This is most evident in the works of Elina Brotherus, Ulla Jokisalo, Janne Lehtinen, Ville Lenkkeri, Anni Leppälä and Jari Silomäki, who create situations where the images reflect a specific attitude or emotional condition that’s somehow universal for all of us. On the other hand, Sanna Kannisto, Sandra Kantanen, Riitta Päiväläinen and Jorma Puranen focus their themes on a more poetic interpretation, by using the natural elements to compose moments for self-reflection on where the human condition is within it. Yet all share a common thread with Eeva Karhu, Jyrki Parantainen and Santeri Tuori, whose works measure time passage by how we collect, layer or move through it. Joined together all of these selected artists share a notional approach in how to photographically capture those complex emotional attributes that determine what our personal natures look like. 

The accompanying exhibition features some of these artists as well and takes place until July 26 2020.

Berlin Lindenstr. 34 and 35
Opening: 27 June 2020, 12 – 8pm
Exhibition: 27 June – 5 September 2020

Fotografisk Copenhagen / CHART Art Fair
28 – 30 August 2020

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Kuva: Laura Berger
Research & Art Published:

Why construction companies must invest in AI

AI increasingly enables construction firms to anticipate problems before they escalate, sometimes even before they happen at all, Antti Ainamo writes
Two students and a professor sitting around a table, talking and looking at laptop screen.
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Call for doctoral student tutors, May 2026

Sign-up to be a tutor for new doctoral students as part of the Aalto Doctoral Orientation Days!
Microscope image of raised A! logo and Finnish text with 20 µm scale bar at bottom left
Press releases Published:

Record-breaking photonics approach traps light on a chip for millions of cycles

With 'nanoscale surgery' the researchers were able to sculpt delicate van der Waals materials without destroying them, achieving record-breaking performance in the process.
Log2Motion simulation with a musculoskeletal model using a smartphone.
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Tired of swiping? Now an AI simulation helps us understand why

Screen logging tells us where smart phone users tap and swipe, but now researchers have developed a musculoskeletal model that helps understand the physical effort that goes into these motions