Ilkka Vääti: Mundus
January 20 to February
19, 2011
Opening Reception: Thursday,
January 20, 7:00 to 8:30 p.m.
Artist Lecture
beginning at 7:15 p.m.
HANCOCK, MI - The Finlandia
University Gallery will display a series of carborundum-silkscreen prints by
Finnish artist Ilkka Väätti January 20 to February 19, 2011. The gallery is in
the Finnish American Heritage Center, Hancock.
An opening reception for the
exhibit, which is titled "Mundus," will take place at the gallery Thursday,
January 20, 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. Väätti will speak at 7:15 p.m. The reception is
free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.
Väätti has been described as a
pictorial kleptomaniac, and the artist himself would be the first to admit his
guilt.
Choosing details from the
pictorial languages of the past and from varying cultures, Väätti's modernist
compositions incorporate fragments from, for example, medieval paintings, Asian
mandalas, or a mosaic floor in Istanbul.
After choosing a pictorial
detail, Väätti borrows its theme and reinterprets its form. These fragments from history, ornamental and seemingly
irrelevant, take on a new dimension when isolated from their original context.
"Although my pictures seem very
abstract," notes Väätti "each of them has its origin in some art historical
image. My works can thus be regarded simultaneously as abstract and
figurative."
"Väätti's work respects the
modernist tradition, but still dares to speak on behalf of the decorative and
ornamental," notes Otso Kantokorpi in a catalog essay for Väätti's Mundus
series.
Väätti refers to his work as
"world pictures." Kantokorpi explains
this term, "Väätti's works are involved in a constant dialogue between
particular and universal, between emotional and intellectual, between art and
religion, between different cultures....together they all make up a world
picture, a particular and a universal one."
Väätti began working with
historical art references in 1992 when he was commissioned to create artwork
for the Messukylä School in Tampere, Finland.
Rather than create a pure abstraction for the school environment, Väätti
decided to find a visual framework from the school's immediate surroundings.
He chose the ancient symbols
found in a medieval stone church in Messukylä, and this method of working with
reference material became the starting point for his Mundus series.
Väätti has been working on the Mundus
series since 1993.
"I want to make personal
interpretations of the images that already exist in the world," Väätti says. "My
pictorial themes come from the collective memory of mankind. I consider myself
a cultural nomad and a follower of an old geometric tradition. From the
standpoint of an artist I am making a survey of the pictorial archetypes, as
well as the legacy of the collective memory of the mankind."
Ilkka Väätti has a bachelor of arts
from the Lahti Institute of Fine Arts and a master of fine art from the Academy
of Fine Arts, Helsinki, Finland.
His work has been featured in
numerous solo exhibits in Finland and in group shows in Finland, Germany,
Denmark, Estonia, and Russia. His work
is included in the collections of the State of Finland, Tampere Museum of
Contemporary Art, Kuopio Art Museum, and other regional and municipal art
museums in Finland.
Väätti will work with Finlandia
University International School of Art & Design BFA students January 17 to
24, 2011.
"Mundus" is on display at the
Finlandia University Gallery through February 19, 2011.
The Finlandia University Gallery
is in the Finnish American Heritage Center, 435 Quincy Street, Hancock. Gallery
hours are Monday to Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Thursday, 8:00 a.m. to 7:00
p.m., Saturday 12:00 to 4:00 p.m., or by appointment.
Please call 906-487-7500 for
more information.
Photo
cutlines:
Photo
1: The artist, Ilkka Väätti 2009, photo:
Marja Väätti
Photo 2:
The Square of Einhard, 2008, silkscreen, 60 x 60 cm, edition 20
Photo
3: Sura, 2010, carborundum-silkscreen, 75 x 75 cm, edition 6
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