Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Finnish National Gallery

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Phone
  
+358 9 173361

Architect
  
Steven Holl

Founded
  
1 January 2014

Finnish National Gallery

Address
  
Kaivokatu 2, 00100 Helsinki, Finland

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–5PMSunday10AM–5PMMondayClosedTuesday10AM–6PMWednesday10AM–8PMThursday10AM–8PMFriday10AM–6PMSaturday10AM–5PM

Subsidiaries
  
Ateneum, Central Art Archives, Sinebrychoff Art Museum

Architectural styles
  
Deconstructivism, Postmodern Architecture

Similar
  
Ateneum, Kiasma, Sinebrychoff Art Museum, National Museum of Finland, Kunsthalle Helsinki

Finnish National Gallery (Finnish: Suomen Kansallisgalleria, Swedish: Finlands Nationalgalleri) is the largest art museum institution of Finland. It consists of the Ateneum art museum, the museum of contemporary art, Kiasma and the Sinebrychoff Art Museum.

Contents

The organization's functions are supported by the conservation department, the administration and services department and Kehys, the art museum development department.


Functions

The mission of the Finnish National Gallery is to further the cultural heritage of Finnish visual arts, to enforce the significance of visual culture in contemporary times, and to develop the art museum industry. They also maintain and develop Finland's largest collection of art and the knowledge and research archives of their field.

Collections

The Ateneum is a predominately Finnish Art Museum with paintings by leading Finnish painters like Albert Edelfelt, Eero Järnefelt, Helene Schjerfbeck, Pekka Halonen, Hugo Simberg, Akseli Gallen-Kallela, and Fanny Churberg. The Sinebrychoff Art Museum has foreign paintings by painters such as Giovanni Boccati, Giovanni Castiglione, Govaert Flinck, Rembrandt, Jan Cook, Goyen, Carl Wilhelm de Hamilton, Lucas Cranach the Elder, Jurgen Ovens, Frans Wouters, Hieronymous Francken the Second, Joshua Reynolds, Antoine Watteau, François Boucher, Carl Von Breda, Alexander Roslin, and Jacob Bjorck. It has an appreciable collection of Swedish miniatures.

References

Finnish National Gallery Wikipedia