Akseli Gallen-Kallela (born Axel Waldemar Gallén; 26 April 1865 – 7 March 1931) was a Finnish painter and a leading figure of Finnish romantic nationalism around the turn of the 20th century. He is considered a pioneer of a distinctly Finnish national art, and his work is regarded as a very important aspect of Finnish national identity.

Gallen-Kallela began his career as a realist painter influenced by Jules Bastien-Lepage before turning, in the 1890s, towards symbolism and a stylised national-romantic idiom. He is best known for his depictions of the Kalevala, the Finnish national epic, including The Defense of the Sampo, Lemminkäinen's Mother and the Aino Triptych, as well as for his illustrations to the Kalevala and to Aleksis Kivi's novel Seven Brothers. He was also active as a graphic artist, designer and fresco painter, executing monumental works for the Finnish pavilion at the Paris World Fair of 1900 and the Jusélius Mausoleum in Pori. He finnicized his name from Gallén to Gallen-Kallela in 1907.

Life and career

Early life

Gallen-Kallela was born on 26 April 1865, in Pori, to a Swedish-speaking family. His father, Peter Wilhelm Gallén, worked as police chief, lawyer, and bank cashier. His mother was Anna Mathilda Wahlroos, daughter of the sea captain and shipowner Bror Mathias Wahlroos from Pori. The Gallén family traces its origins to Kallela farm in the parish of Lemu, near Turku. Gallen-Kallela was the third of what would become twelve siblings. His mother was an enthusiastic amateur painter who took an active interest in her son's artistic ambitions.

Gallen-Kallela was raised in Tyrvää, where the family had moved in 1867 after his father had bought a farm there. Gallen-Kallela was educated at home until 1876, when he, at the age of 11, was sent to Helsinki to study at the Swedish Normal Lyceum, together with two of his brothers, because his father opposed his ambition to become a painter. He studied concurrently at the evening programme of the Finnish Art Society's drawing school (1878–1881) and at the School of Arts and Crafts (1880–1881). After completing his studies at the lyceum, he began full-time studies at the Finnish Art Society's drawing school in autumn 1881, receiving private instruction from Sigrid August Keinänen (1881–1882) and Albert Edelfelt (1883–1884), and later studied privately under Adolf von Becker (1882–1884). Between 1911 and 1913, he designed and built a studio and house for his family at Tarvaspää, approximately 10 km northwest of the centre of Helsinki.

Independent Finland

thumb|100px|Gallen-Kallela in his lieutenant uniform during the civil war, 1918

thumb|100px|Portrait of A. Gallen-Kallela, [[Ilya Repin, 1920]]

The family moved back from Tarvaspää to Kalela in 1915 to escape the turmoil of the First World War. In 1918, Gallen-Kallela and his son Jorma took part in the fighting at the front of the Finnish Civil War. When the regent, General Mannerheim, heard about that, he invited Gallen-Kallela to design the flags, official decorations and uniforms for the newly independent Finland. For the flag, Gallen-Kallela proposed a white-blue cross flag, with colors inverted (white cross on blue), but it was considered too similar to the Swedish flag and particularly the era's Greek flag. In 1919, he was appointed aide-de-camp to Mannerheim. In 1920, he made an agreement with the publishing company WSOY for the eventual publication of Great Kalevala, with the less decorative Koru-Kalevala being published first in 1922. He was granted a professorship in 1919, and from 1919 to 1931 he was the Vice-Chairman of the Kalevala Society.