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Wild Souls. Symbolism in the Art of the Baltic States 12/10/2018 – 03/02/2019

Kumu Art Museum
Adult: Kumu Art Museum
€14
  • Family: Kumu Art Museum
    €28
  • Discount: Kumu Art Museum
    €9
  • Adult ticket with donation: Art Museum of Estonia
    €20
Johann Walter (1869–1932). Talutüdruk. U 1904. Õli. Läti Rahvuslik Kunstimuuseum
Exhibition

Wild Souls. Symbolism in the Art of the Baltic States

Location: 2nd floor, Great Hall

The high-level exhibition, which is the result of cooperation between the three Baltic states, was initially on display at the Musée d’Orsay in Paris and its head curator is Rodolphe Rapetti, the outstanding French researcher of Symbolism.

Almost 150 works by notable artists from the art history of the Baltic countries dating from the late 19th century to the 1930s are included in the exhibition. On view are works by Janis Rozentāls, Vilhelms Purvītis, Mikalojus Konstantinas Čiurlionis, Kristjan Raud, Nikolai Triik, Konrad Mägi, Oskar Kallis and many other great names of Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian art from the collections of four Baltic museums: the Latvian National Museum of Art, Art Museum of Estonia, Lithuanian Art Museum and M. K. Čiurlionis National Museum of Art.

The exhibition reveals the specific features of early 20th-century Baltic Symbolism. The local young artists set out to discover the contemporary art movements in Europe, but also had aspirations to help create their own national identities. Their art often intertwines the international artistic idiom with local folk art and symbols of oral heritage. The idea of creative freedom was brought from Western Europe, along with the belief in the ability of art to express the spiritual levels hidden in people.

The three main themes of the exhibition – Myths and Legends, Soul, and Nature – express the artists’ interest in romantic narratives, people’s individual inner worlds and the mystery of nature. The artists delved into their homelands’ narratives and searched for ways to interpret ancient stories in a contemporary artistic idiom.

The exhibition is accompanied by a voluminous catalogue in Estonian and English. This is the first exhaustive treatment of Baltic Symbolism, which is introduced by Rodolphe Rapetti’s essay “Terra incognita”. Rapetti’s essay is motivated by a desire to introduce the works of the artists from the Baltic countries, which the author considers to be unique in the international context of Symbolism, to the broader art public of Western Europe. In addition to abundant pictorial material, the catalogue includes texts by art researchers from the three Baltic states introducing the works included in the exhibition.

Wild Souls. Symbolism in the Art of the Baltic States has received a grant from the Estonian Ministry of Culture and it is part of the international cultural programme celebrating the centenary of the Republic of Estonia. The exhibition was initially on display at the Musée d’Orsay in Paris from April to mid-July of this year. Almost 250,000 people visited the exhibition.

Curators: Rodolphe Rapetti and Liis Pählapuu
Room design and graphic design: Tuuli Aule