Midsummer! Atmospheric Landscapes of the North 1880–1920

06. July 2025 to 11. January 2026

In Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland, Midsummer is observed through large, festive celebrations. The clear light and long days around the summer solstice and the so-called white nights immerse their landscapes in an entirely unique atmosphere. In the period between 1880 and 1920 – a time in which modern Scandinavian and Finnish art were flourishing – artists developed a new visual idiom which gives expression to the characteristics and temperaments of their homelands. Realism, naturalism, impressionism and symbolism were seen as new developments. Open-air painting demanded that artists see their own time in a manner that was based on reality but nonetheless subjective.

 

This exhibition offers a broad overview of artistic developments in the lands of the north, presenting works by the most important painters, such as Anna Ancher, Peder Severin Krøyer, Bruno Liljefors, Akseli Gallen-Kallela, Helene Schjerfbeck and Christian Skredsvig, among others. The show is also exceptional due to the fact that most of its approximately 70 works come from the exquisite art collection of the Fielmann family. Many of them are being exhibited publicly for the first time.

 

A catalogue will accompany the exhibition.

 

This exhibition is supported by:

 

 

 

 

 

Cultural partner:

 

Media partner:

 

Akseli Gallen-Kallela
Sonnenuntergang über dem Ruovesi-See
Akseli Gallen-Kallela
Sonnenuntergang über dem Ruovesi-See

1915-16, © Collection Broere Charitable Foundation

Edvard Munch
Landschaft in Vestre Aker
Edvard Munch
Landschaft in Vestre Aker

1882, Sammlung Familie Fielmann

Laurits Tuxen
Badeleben an Skagens Nordstrand
Laurits Tuxen
Badeleben an Skagens Nordstrand

1909, Sammlung Familie Fielmann

Victor Westerholm
Sommermorgen
Victor Westerholm
Sommermorgen

1904, Sammlung Familie Fielmann, Foto: Jussi Tiainen

Anna Ancher
Sommerabend
Anna Ancher
Sommerabend

undat., Sammlung Familie Fielmann

Christian Skredsvig
Der See Jupsjøen
Christian Skredsvig
Der See Jupsjøen

1901, Sammlung Familie Fielmann, Foto: Øystein Thorvaldsen, Henie Onstad Kunstsenter