Sinebrychoffin Taidemuseo

Invitation to an exhibition preview on Tuesday 9 September at 14.00: Spain Beyond the Myths is a journey of imagination

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This autumn, the Sinebrychoff Art Museum takes you back to the summer: the Spain Beyond the Myths exhibition offers Mediterranean light and landscapes, luxuriant ruffs, warmth and Spanish spice. The exhibition presents Spanish painting of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. We invite you to an advance viewing of the exhibition on Tuesday 9 September at 14.00. Register by emailing merja.haikio@siff.fi 

A person is sitting on a bench and holding a long pearl necklace.
Luis Masriera (1872–1958): Odalisque. Colección Pedrera Martínez. Colección Pedrera Martínez.

Exhibition Preview
Tue. 9 Sep. 2025 at 14.00
The producers and curators of the exhibition, the art historians Helena Alonso and J. Òscar Carrascosa of c2c Cultura will introduce the exhibition in English. Salla Heino, a curator both of the Sinebrychoff Art Museum and of this exhibition for the Museum and Director of the Museum Kirsi Eskelinen, will also be present. Register for the press conference by emailing merja.haikio@siff.fi


Spain Beyond the Myths
11 Sep. 2025–11 Jan. 2026
Sinebrychoff Art Museum

What is the first thing Spain brings to your mind? Is it perhaps light, heat, holidays or beaches? These mental images are strongly associated with Spain. Spain Beyond the Myths, the exhibition at the Sinebrychoff Art Museum, examines the associations with the country and how Spanish artists have played their part in actively building them.

“The art of the great Spanish masters such as Francisco de Goya (1746–1828) and Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) are well known here in Finland. By contrast, Spanish nineteenth-century painting is barely known at all, and we want to put it on display,” Museum Director Kirsi Eskelinen says.

The exhibition will be the first to acquaint the Finnish public with Spanish nineteenth- and early twentieth-century art to such a broad and diverse scale. It includes famous artists of the period, such as Mariano Fortuny y Marsal (1838–1874), Lluís Masriera (1872–1958) and Joaquín Sorolla (1863–1923).

Spain has fascinated European travellers since the eighteenth century. The mental imagery of Spain arose in the interaction between travellers enamoured with the country and the local artists who reflected their associations. A strong cultural identity can be sensed in the paintings on display. The works show the country’s exoticism and themes which highlight local traits. Today, travellers from around the world, inspired by these associations, continue to look for the authentic Spain.

The exhibition displays both depictions of mythical Spain and paintings reaching towards a new era. The producer of the exhibition is c2c Creación y gestión de proyectos culturales, S.L., from Spain, and the curators are the art historians Helena Alonso and J. Òscar Carrascosa. The Museum’s curator is Salla Heino.


Enthralled by the exotic

Andalusia was a destination for many travellers as early as the nineteenth century. The region’s landscapes, cultural mix and local traditions fitted the mental images of Spanish exoticism well. Paintings which idolized Andalucian themes were particularly successful on the European markets.

Mariano Fortuny y Marsal (1838–1874) was one of the greatest international masters from Spain in the nineteenth century. He achieved particular success with his Orientalist themes. Many followed in Fortuny’s footsteps, adopting his painting styles, themes and international influences. One popular theme in Orientalism was idealized female figures, odalisques. The odalisques’ attractive personas were considered interesting and mystical in art, even though in practice these Oriental concubines were also bought and sold. 

In Spanish art, popular themes also included romanticized everyday situations, paintings depicting moods and local customs, and religious themes. The exhibition displays garment peddlers, a decorative and ephemeral painting of a shoe fitting at a cobbler’s, a barber’s visit depicting city life, and a landscape of cyclists on a break depicting a new kind of leisure time.

Just as travellers came to Spain to experience the exotic, Spanish artists went abroad to search for and depict new cultures. They particularly favoured European centres of art such as Paris and Rome. The influence of a mythical Spain came with them, but in the experimental atmosphere of the artistic hubs, many artists found a more international form of expression.


Seekers of light

The Mediterranean light brought artists from all over Europe to the Spanish coast. Valencia and Catalonia were particular sites of trends focused on the study of light. The artist friends Joaquín Sorolla (1863–1923) and José Navarro Llorens (1867–1923) were excited by painting en plein air and fleeting moods, reminiscent of the Impressionists. They are known as masterful depicters of light and water.

“Sorolla’s art reflects international influences. His paintings draw the viewer’s eyes to the creative use of colour and the artist’s fascinating ability to capture light and mood. In addition, Sorolla was a prized portraitist,” says curator Salla Heino.

The atmosphere of Rome and Paris at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries shaped Spanish art in the direction of Modernism. From traditions and stereotypes, landscapes and the modernizing world received space in the themes of the artists of the new era.


Exhibition curated by:
Helena Alonso, C2c, art historian
J. Òscar Carrascosa, C2c, art historian
Salla Heino, Sinebrychoff Art Museum, curator


Works on loan from:
Colección Pedrera Martínez
Fundación Fran Daurel
Museo Diocesano de Barcelona


Lectures:
17.9.2025
at 6 p.m.
Javier Galván Guijo: (The title of the lecture will be confirmed later)

1.10.2025 
at 6 p.m.
Curator Salla Heino: Looking at Images of Spanishness

5.11.2025 
at 6 p.m.
Mirva Saukkola, PhD: Exotic, Sensual Spain: How Art Created the Myth of the Spanish Woman




Oy Sinebrychoff Ab supports the Sinebrychoff Art Museum.

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Images

A person is sitting on a bench and holding a long pearl necklace.
Luis Masriera (1872–1958): Odalisque. Colección Pedrera Martínez.
Colección Pedrera Martínez.
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Two people are sitting near a tree and one is standing next to it.
Ramón Casas (1866–1932): Cyclists’ Rest, 1896. Colección Fundación Fran Daurel.
Colección Fundación Fran Daurel.
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A woman is sitting on a bench in a frilly skirt.
Luis Jiménez Aranda (1845–1928): Moment of Reflection, 1876. Colección Pedrera Martínez.
Colección Pedrera Martínez.
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Links

The Sinebrychoff Art Museum

Tickets: Museum entry €20 Concessions €12 Museum Card, free of charge, Under 18s €0. Museum ticket purchased online €18. Admission to the Home Museum and permanent collection on the 2nd floor is free.
Every last Friday of the month, admission to the entire museum is free from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m.

Opening hours: Tues, Thurs, Fri 11–18, Wed 10–20, Sat–Sun 10–17, Mon closed.

The Museum is also open on Mondays in July and August. Opening hours 1.7–31.8.2025: Mon 11–17, Tue, Thu, Fri 11–18, Wed 10–20, Sat, Sun 10–17.

Guided tour bookings: Finnish National Gallery service sales, +358 294 500 500 (Mon–Fri, 10–14) sales@fng.fi

Contact: Sinebrychoff Art Museum, Bulevardi 40 120 Helsinki, Finland, +358 294 500 460 www.siff.fi

Facebook @siffmuseo | Instagram @Sinebrychoffartmuseum | X @Sinebrychoffart


The Finnish National Gallery is a national organization for the visual arts. It runs three of Finland’s best-known museums: the Ateneum Art Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma and the Sinebrychoff Art Museum. It also manages the national art collection and its archives, develops Finnish cultural heritage, and promotes art to the wider public.
www.kansallisgalleria.fi/en

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