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Bio
Early
work
Aalto's architectural studies at the Technical Institute of Helsinki
in Otaniemi, Fin., were interrupted by the Finnish War of Independence,
in which he participated. Following his graduation in 1921, Aalto toured
Europe and upon his return began practice in Jyväskylä, in central
Finland. In 1927 he moved his office to Turku, where he worked in association
with Erik Bryggman until 1933, the year in which he moved to Helsinki.
In 1925 he married Aino Marsio, a fellow student, who served as his professional
collaborator until her death in 1949. The couple had two children.
The years 1927 and 1928 were significant in Aalto's career. He received
commissions for three important buildings that established him as the
most advanced architect in Finland and brought him worldwide recognition
as well. These were the Turun Sanomat Building (newspaper office) in Turku,
the tuberculosis sanatorium at Paimio, and the Municipal Library at Viipuri
(now Vyborg, Russia). His plans for the last two were chosen in a competition,
a common practice with public buildings in Finland. Both the office building
and the sanatorium emphasize functional, straightforward design and are
without historical stylistic references. They go beyond the simplified
classicism common in Finnish architecture of the 1920s, resembling somewhat
the building designed by Walter Gropius for the Bauhaus school of design
in Dessau, Ger. (1925-26). Like Gropius, Aalto used smooth white surfaces,
ribbon windows, flat roofs, and terraces and balconies.
The third commission, the Viipuri Municipal Library, although exhibiting
a similar dependence on European prototypes by Gropius and others, is
a significant departure marking Aalto's personal style. Its spatially
complex interior is arranged on various levels. For the auditorium portion
of the library Aalto devised an undulating acoustic ceiling of wooden
strips, a fascinating detail that, together with his use of curved laminated
wood furniture of his own design, appealed both to the public and to those
professionals who had held reservations about the clinical severity of
modern architecture. The warm textures of wood provided a welcome contrast
to the general whiteness of the building. It was Aalto's particular success
here that identified him with the so-called organic approach, or regional
interpretation, of modern design. He continued in this vein, with manipulation
of floor levels and use of natural materials, skylights, and irregular
forms. By the mid-1930s Aalto was recognized as one of the world's outstanding
modern architects; unlike many of his peers, he had an identifiable personal
style.
Finnish pavilions for two world's fairs (Paris, 1937; New York City,
1939-40) further enhanced Aalto's reputation as an inventive designer
of free architectural forms. In these designs, both chosen in competition,
he continued to use wood for structure and for surface effects. Also during
this period, in 1938, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City held an
exhibition of his work, showing furniture that he had designed and photographs
of his buildings.
Aalto's experiments in furniture date from the early 1930s, when he
furnished the sanatorium at Paimio. His furniture is noted for its use
of laminated wood in ribbonlike forms that serve both structural and aesthetic
ends. In 1935 the Artek Company was established by Aalto and Maire Gullichsen,
the wife of the industrialist and art collector Harry Gullichsen, to manufacture
and market his furniture. The informal warmth of Aalto's interiors is
best seen in the much-admired country home Villa Mairea, which he built
for the Gullichsens near Noormarkku, Fin.
Mature
style
The decade of the 1940s was not productive; it was disrupted by war and
saddened by his wife's death. In 1952 he married Elissa Mäkiniemi,
a trained architect, who became his new collaborator.
Aalto's commissions after 1950, in addition to being greater in number,
were more varied and widely dispersed: a high-rise apartment building
in Bremen, W.Ger. (1958), a church in Bologna, Italy (1966), an art museum
in Iran (1970). His continuing work in Finland, however, remained the
measure of his genius. Many of his projects involved site planning of
building groups. Two such projects were the master plans of colleges at
Otaniemi (1949-55) and at Jyväskylä (1952-57). Aalto's experience
in planning originated early with such industrial commissions as the Sunila
cellulose factory (1936-39, extended 1951-54), which included workers'
housing and was a triumph of comprehensive planning.
The single work that epitomizes Aalto's mature style is perhaps the
Säynätsalo town hall group. Modest in scale in its forest setting,
it nonetheless asserts a quiet force. Its simple forms are in red brick,
wood, and copper, all traditional materials of Finland. Viewing it, a
person feels the achievement of a perfect building, in that the essence
of the time, the place, the people, and their purpose is brought into
focus by the awareness of the architect.
Aalto received many honours. He was a member of the Academy of Finland
(Suomen Aketemia) and was its president from 1963 to 1968; he was a member
of the Congrès Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne from 1928
to 1956. His awards included the Royal Gold Medal for Architecture from
the Royal Institute of British Architects (1957) and the Gold Medal from
the American Institute of Architects (1963).
Assessment
Aalto, whose work exemplifies the best of 20th-century Scandinavian
architecture, was one of the first to depart from the stiffly geometric
designs common to the early period of the modern movement and to stress
informality and personal expression. His style is regarded as both romantic
and regional. He used complex forms and varied materials, acknowledged
the character of the site, and gave attention to every detail of building.
Aalto achieved an international reputation through his more than 200 buildings
and projects, ranging from factories to churches, a number of them built
outside Finland.
Aalto's preliminary plans were freely sketched, without the use of T-square
and triangle, so that the unfettered creative urge for inventive shapes
and irregular forms was allowed full play before functional relationships
and details were resolved. The absence of theoretical rigidity revealed
itself in his final designs, which happily retained the spontaneity and
individuality of his early sketches. As a Swiss art historian expressed
it, he dared "the leap from the rational-functional to the irrational-organic."
Since Aalto's staff was small (some six to eight architects), all of the
work bore the imprint of his personality.
Aalto wrote little to explain his work, but his architecture conveyed
a variable, lively temperament, free from dogma and without monotony.
His work was said to express the spirit of Finland and its people, primitive
yet lyrical. His friendships with such artists as Fernand Léger,
Jean Arp, and Constantin Brancusi may have nourished his fondness for
curvilinear shapes. While his work was never compulsively innovative,
neither was it static. His late designs showed an increased complexity
and dynamism that some regarded as incautious. In particular, his work
of the late 1960s and early 1970s was marked by splayed, diagonal shapes
and clustered, overlapping volumes. Energy and imagination were ever present
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