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Landscapes of Identity: Estonian Art 1700–1945 Permanent exhibition

Kumu Art Museum

3rd floor, A-wing

Adult: Kumu Art Museum
€14
  • Family: Kumu Art Museum
    €28
  • Discount: Kumu Art Museum
    €9
  • Adult ticket with donation: Art Museum of Estonia
    €20
Näitusse poster
Permanent exhibition

Landscapes of Identity: Estonian Art 1700–1945

The permanent exhibition tells the story of Estonian art as it evolved through Estonia’s multi-ethnic history, growing into a heritage that blends Estonian, Baltic German and Russian traditions. The focus is on the role of art in society and in shaping the identities of diverse communities.

The themes featured include the connections between Baltic German and Estonian visual culture, the meanings of images in the young Estonian nation state, visions of modern life, the voices of women artists, art in the authoritarian era of the 1930s and during the Second World War, and the emergence of local identity landscapes. It also looks at how the visual construction of identities has been influenced, along with high art, by amateur artists, by design and graphic design and by the development of professional art education.

Video Guide. 20 Comments

  • 20 short videos where artists, art historians and other experts comment on prominent topics and themes featured in the permanent exhibition.

Project space exhibitions and works by contemporary artists help to open up new perspectives on the history of Estonian art.

Exhibitions in project spaces:

Project Space I

Project Space II

Exhibition views

Installations by contemporary artists:

Installation “The Sail”

Authors: Neeme Külm, Tõnis Saadoja

Neeme Külm, Tõnis Saadoja. Installatsioon “Puri”

Portraits were the most important genre in Baltic German art. An art collection in the Baltic manor house of the 18th and 19th centuries typically amounted to a gallery of family portraits. Owing to these portraits, an array of images of the ruling monarchs and the local German-speaking elite has become lodged in the Estonian cultural memory: portraits of Russian czars and senior officials of the imperial court, Baltic barons and intellectuals, girls of the Biedermeier era, spinsters in bonnets, portraits in domestic interiors and in landscape settings, portraits of families, children and dogs.

The portrait galleries of manor houses and a sense of nostalgia characteristically associated with Baltic German culture inspired this installation by Neeme Külm and Tõnis Saadoja, featuring 52 Baltic German portraits on a vast sail-shaped wall.

Booklet

We thank:
Art Museum of Estonia’s Friends of Art Society, Scandinavia wallpapers

Installation “Blond”

Author: Marge Monko

Marge Monko. Installatsioon “Blond”. 2020.

This work comments on the predominance of blonde and blue-eyed women in the visual culture of the 1930s. On the one hand, this tradition goes back to the drawings of fair-haired Estonians by 19th-century artists and ethnographers – in the 1930s these images lived on notably in the figure of an Estonian girl in traditional dress. On the other hand, the tastes and preferences of the time were swayed by Hollywood with its platinum blonde actresses, especially Jean Harlow, who often featured in Estonian newspapers. In the late 1930s, also many Estonian women began to bleach their hair. Even today, Estonian women seem to show a marked liking for blonde hair colour.

Fair-haired and blue-eyed girls in traditional dress are portrayed in several of Ants Laikmaa’s pastels of the 1930s. In a way, these pictures bear a resemblance to the style common in the German art of the period, idealising rural lifestyle and racial purity.

The format of the work is inspired by 19th-century anthropological portraits and the „Shirley“ card used in photo labs to calibrate skin tones during the printing process. Until the 1980s, films were calibrated against photos of light-skinned models, so that with darker skin colours, it was difficult to get the tone right.

The work portrays a young woman in profile and in the three-quarter profile. The added features – colour charts used in photography and beauty salons, a Munsell wheel and colour system, hair dyeing instructions – highlight the important role that colour and calibrating systems play in the visual representation of people and, consequently, in shaping identities.

We thank: 
Anu Konze, Merilin Perli, Katrin Rannaväli (E.M.A. Model Management), Kaja Seppel, Cultural Endowment of Estonia

Team

Curators: Linda Kaljundi, Kadi Polli
Interior design: Raul Kalvo, Helen Oja
Exhibition design:
Raul Kalvo, Tõnis Saadoja
Graphic design:
Tuuli Aule
Coordinator: Magdaleena Maasik

Conservators:
Isabel Aaso-Zahradnikova, Jelena Jurjeva, Maris Klaas, Margit Pajupuu, Sirje Säär, Allan Talu, Tõnu Uusküla, Aleš Zahradnik

Exhibition team:
Kaarel Eelma, Darja Jefimova, Ulrika Jõemägi, Juta Kivimäe, Madli Mihkelson, Anastassia Langinen, Sandra Lääne-Vent, Liisi Raidna, Renita Raudsepp, Elnara Taidre, Kristiina Tiideberg, Eda Tuulberg, Mari-Liis Vanem

Translators:
Kaja Kährik, Matthias Jost, Evelina Vedom

Language editors:
Kaja Kährik, Ester Kangur, Richard Adang, Jekaterina Lamus

We thank:
AkzoNobel, Art Museum of Estonia Friends of Art Society, Estonian History Museum, Estonian Literary Museum, Estonian National Museum, Estonian Museum of Applied Art and Design, National Archives of Estonia, National Library of Estonia, Tallinn City Museum, Tartu Art Museum and Museums of Virumaa