Exhibition/event has ended.

Eliel Saarinen and His Beautiful Architecture in Finland

Panasonic Shiodome Museum of Art
Finished

Artists

Eliel Saarinen
*To prevent the spread of COVID-19, we would like to request that you reserve the date and time of your visit in advance from our reservation website.

Finland is renowned for its beautiful forests and lakes. It is also home to Finnish modernism, an architectural style that is also popular in Japan. One major figure who helped develop the style was Eliel Saarinen (1873–1950). Saarinen founded an architectural firm with university friends Herman Gesellius and Armas Lindgren. One of his first jobs at the firm, designing the Finnish pavilion at the 1900 Paris World Fair, won him considerable praise. Initially, Saarinen worked in a style that was dubbed National Romantic, which while influenced by art nouveau was more focused on expressing the country’s traditional cultures. The nationalist ethos behind this style struck a chord with the people of Finland at a time when they were seeking independence from Russia.

Saarinen and his partners eventually built Hvitträsk, a complex designed to be a cross-genre work of art presenting an ideal lifestyle: living quietly in nature inside a home that also served as a venue for social functions with other artists. Saarinen gradually expanded his work into residences, commercial buildings, public buildings, train stations, and urban design. Through this varied portfolio, Saarinen played an important role in modernizing architecture throughout the first half of the 20th century. What began as a multicultural style with a strong focus on traditional Finnish culture gradually morphed into something more distinctive and modernist, presenting a new kind of Finnish identity.

This exhibition focuses on Saarinen’s work in Finland from the time before his emigration to the United States in 1923. Architectural drawings, photographs, and designs of furniture and lifestyle items shed light on Saarinen’s style, at once revolutionary and grounded in nature and the local environment. He was also skilled at using light and shadow to imbue his work with richness. At a time when many people find themselves pausing to rethink their ways of life, visitors may find Saarinen’s works speaking to them at a visceral level.

Schedule

Jul 3 (Sat) 2021-Sep 20 (Mon) 2021 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
10:00-18:00
Closed
Wednesday
Closed during the summer, New Year holidays and in between exhibitions.
Notice
Until 20:00 on August 6 and September 3. Closed on August 10 to 13. By appointment only.
FeeAdults ¥800; Seniors 65 & Over ¥700; University Students ¥600; High School and Junior High School Students ¥400; Elementary School Students and Under, Persons with Disability Certificates + 1 Companion free.
Websitehttps://panasonic.co.jp/ls/museum/exhibition/21/210703/en.html
VenuePanasonic Shiodome Museum of Art
https://panasonic.co.jp/ew/museum/en/
Location4F Panasonic Tokyo Shiodome Bldg., 1-5-1 Higashi-Shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-8301
Access5 minute walk from exit 3 at Shiodome Station on the Toei Oedo line, 8 minute walk from the Shiodome exit of JR Shimbashi Station, 6 minute walk from exit 2 at Shimbashi Station on the Ginza line.
Phone050-5541-8600 (Hello Dial)
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