Alvar Aalto Museum receives a donation from the Allan and Bo Hjelt Art Foundation
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 7, 2024


Alvar Aalto Museum receives a donation from the Allan and Bo Hjelt Art Foundation
The donation includes two safari chairs and two upholstered dining room chairs. Photo Maija Holma, Alvar Aalto Foundation.



The furniture donation from the Allan and Bo Hjelt Art Foundation made it possible to create Artek´s 1940s interior for the Alvar Aalto Museum´s permanent exhibition.

Allan Hjelt (1885-1945) was a leading figure in Finnish economy and a patron of the arts. In addition to business, he cherished the cultural relations between Finland and Italy and became Italy’s Consul General to Finland already in 1924, and later on Honorary Consul General for Finland in Rome. During the Second World War, he was Finland’s Trade Representative attached to the Embassy of Finland in Bern, Switzerland.

Allan Hjelt owned the export company Italo-Finlandese, which took wood-industry products to Italy, and brought back goods such as textiles, foodstuffs, wines, and typewriters and other machines. Hjelt´s relationship with Aino and Alvar Aalto and Artek were strengthened at the time of the Milan Triennial in 1936. Finland’s participation in this major international industrial-arts showcase had been in the balance when Hjelt took the initiative and settled the matter. Italo-Finlandese paid most of the costs of the Finnish section and Aino Aalto designed it using Artek products. Collaboration on the exhibition resulted in Italo-Finlandese becoming the agent for Aalto furniture in Italy.

Allan Hjelt himself had apparently been fascinated by Artek's style and in 1939 commissioned Artek to decorate the Hjelt residence on Unioninkatu 18 in Helsinki. The interior of his official residence was one of the first major private commissions received by Artek, which was founded in 1935. Aino Aalto did the design with her close collaborator, the interior architect Maija Heikinheimo.




The interior created for Hjelt was a Gesamtkunstwerk designed right down to the finest detail. Besides furniture from Artek’s ranges, several unique items of furniture were made specifically for the apartment. The art acquisitions and everyday utility objects were carefully thought through beforehand at Artek. The design work was done in 1939, but the Second World War delayed its execution until 1944. Rationing meant that many details had to be altered: for example, teak was unobtainable.

In 1933, Allan Hjelt married Swedish Valborg Unander-Scharin. In the end of 1930s Aino Aalto also designed the living room interior of their villa in Saltsjöbaden.

Now, this Unioninkatu interior, created as part of the museum´s main exhibition, has been inspired by an artefact donation from the Allan and Bo Hjelt Art Foundation and complemented with objects from the Alvar Aalto Museum´s collection. A valuable donation from Allan Hjelt´s son, business executive Bo Hjelt (born 1935), includes two armchairs and two dining chairs from these original Artek interiors. The chairs, which have been stored in outdoor storage for decades were renovated at the Alvar Aalto Museum. In addition, Bo and Kerstin Hjelt have lent a mahongany tea trolley, as well as leather suitcases used by Allan Hjelt and his wife.

Bo Hjelt inherited an important art collection from his parents and added to it over his lifetime. In 2006, Bo Hjelt donated most of the collection to the Åbo Akademi University Foundation, one of its founders in 1917 being Allan Hjelt himself. Bo Hjelt is involved in the Hjelt Foundations (Allan and Bo Hjelt Art Foundation, The Bo Hjelt Foundation for Spina Bifida in memory of Madeleine Hjelt, and The Bo and Kerstin Hjelt Diabetes Foundation). The Hjelt Art Foundation was supporting Aalto Studio, a student workshop of the Harvard University Graduate School of Design held in 2018 in Jyväskylä to discuss visions for the future of the Säynätsalo Town Hall, designed by Alvar Aalto in 1949-52.

The donation strengthens my ties to Finland
Bo Hjelt is pleased to have returned the unique Artek chairs to Finland. “I remember that the chairs were in my childhood home. I was born in Finland but have lived abroad for 60 years as an international businessman. The donation strengthens my ties to Finland, and to Alvar Aalto's city of Jyväskylä”, says Bo Hjelt. "It was in connection with a visit to the Alvar Aalto Museum that I came to think of the Artek chairs that I inherited from my parents Allan and Valborg Hjelt and I kept in a loft in Sweden."

“My father Allan Hjelt did as honorary consul for Finland in Italy promote cultural and economic cooperation between these countries. I have continued in my father's footsteps to develop Finnish industry and to promote international cultural exchange through the Allan and Bo Hjelt Art Foundation”, states Bo Hjelt.










Today's News

September 20, 2020

It's a banana. It's art. And now it's the Guggenheim's problem.

New York plans statue of justice Ginsburg, 'daughter of Brooklyn'

Real-life 'Pianist' possessions up for auction in Poland

President Harding's family battles over exhuming his body

wHY's new expansion of David Kordansky Gallery opens in Los Angeles

Lisson Gallery to open on Cork Street in Mayfair

Christian Liaigre, minimalist interior designer, dies at 77

Exhibition of new work by Trenton Doyle Hancock spans both of James Cohan's locations

Two Flash Gordon newspaper strips from 1940 light up Heritage Auction's European Comic Art event

Galeria Jaqueline Martins to open in Brussels

Exhibition at Martos Gallery features new sculpture-asiinstallation by Kayode Ojo

Art Gallery of South Australia announces new Board Chair

New digital database to provide unprecedented access to the past, present and future of Glastonbury Festival

'States of Mind: Art and American Democracy' to coincide with the presidential election

Alvar Aalto Museum receives a donation from the Allan and Bo Hjelt Art Foundation

Blum & Poe opens an exhibition of new work by Los Angeles-based artist Aaron Garber-Maikovska

Major new exhibition explores history & legacy of "commonwealth" in VA, PA, PR

Make a collage with your newspaper

Gigantic dog sculptures welcome New Yorkers back to Broadway in the Garment District

Stephen Cohen, influential historian of Russia, dies at 81

Modern Art opens a solo exhibition of new works by Ron Nagle

French butcher seeks to carve out Unesco distinction

Pace Gallery opens an exhibition featuring Nina Katchadourian's Monument to the Unelected (2008-ongoing)

Colin Kaepernick's rookie NFL debut 49ers jersey heads to Julien's Auctions Dec. 4

Microsoft70-483 Certification and Its 70-483 Exam: Go This Way with Practice Tests

Can you sue for mesothelioma Top Lawyer Advice?

Learn about Airport Transfer Bristol

OGS Capital Reviews On Aspects To Consider While Starting A New Business:

Check Out These Excellent U.S. Art Galleries




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful