Sinebrychoffin Taidemuseo

Invitation to an exhibition preview, 14:00, Tuesday, 10.2.2026 Poetry in dialogue with visual art in the Night exhibition

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Night is a new collaboration – with a poet. In the exhibition poetry and visual art prompt us to take a fresh look at this very familiar time of day, and to be seduced by its mysterious atmosphere. It explores the night and the world of dreams, illuminated by old European art and works from the 19th century to the present.  

You are welcome to the preview at 14:00, Tuesday, 10.2.2026. Register: merja.haikio@siff.fi 

A rabbit with shining eyes.
Saara Salmi (1981–): Rabbit, from the series: About Alice and the Rabbit, 2011. State Art Deposit Collection, Finnish National Gallery.

Exhibition preview 
14:00, Tuesday, 10.2.2026

Museum Director Kirsi Eskelinen will introduce the exhibition. Also present to talk about their work will be exhibition poet Henriikka Tavi and designer Lauri Johansson, who devised the exhibition architecture. 
Register for the press conference: merja.haikio@siff.fi


Night  
12.2–23.8.2026 
Sinebrychoff Art Museum


This exhibition at the Sinebrychoff Art Museum takes us into the night and its many different faces. Besides the artworks, poetry is also a powerful presence, guiding us into these mysterious hours. Inspired by the art and the exhibition’s theme, poet Henriikka Tavi has written poems that form an integral part of the whole. 

Rather than explaining away this special time of day, visitors are encouraged to feel and interpret the night. Instead of a set of distinct works, the exhibition is a total work of art, with its architecture – devised by Designer Lauri Johansson – also playing a major role. 

“We audaciously set about testing a completely new concept, in which collaboration with a poet opens up new interpretations. The exhibition architecture intensifies the nocturnal atmosphere with stage-set-like elements,” says Museum Director Kirsi Eskelinen

The exhibition explores night and the world of dreams, transporting us from dusk to dawn. First, the twilight of evening creeps in and the moon rises in the sky. The moon has inspired Ivan Aivazovsky (1817–1900), Albert Edelfelt (1854–1905), and others. Bedtime stories and counting sheep are rituals that coax us to dive down to the wellsprings of sleep. Karel Dujardin (1626–1678) and Johann Heinrich Roos (1631–1685) depict sheep in their prints. In the voyage of dreams, the destination is surprising and things are often peculiar and a little skewed. There are evident links with the incongruous dream world, for instance, in the works of Saara Salmi (b. 1981) and Mikko Ängeslevä (b. 1982). And the nightmares retreat, at the latest, when the morning sun rises and a new day dawns. 

The works here are from the Finnish National Gallery’s own collection, with old European art plus paintings, prints and sculptures from the 19th century to the present day. Also on display are copies of archive cards from the Finnish Literature Society’s records documenting Finnish folklore about dreams and premonitions. The youngest family members have also been remembered in the design of the exhibition, for example, by hanging the works low and by giving youngsters things to do. The curator of the exhibition is Kersti Tainio.


Poetry gets us in tune with the night

The exhibition design is intended to create moods and to leave space for the viewer’s own associations. This also led to an innovative collaboration with the poet Henriikka Tavi

“Writing the poems was part of the construction of the exhibition as a whole. The workgroup met on several occasions and I set out my idea at a very early stage. It made sense to write in dialogue with the artworks selected for the exhibition,” Tavi says. 

Instead of the usual wall texts, you can read poetry that attunes you to exploring the exhibition’s theme and the works on display. The poems add new levels to interpretation of the works and act as a portal to the present day. The art conducts a dialogue with the poetry. 

“When I write a poem, I see myself as making art, and I’m sure many exponents of other arts think of themselves as, for example, painting or performing poetry,” Tavi says. 

You can also sit down to enjoy poetry in the bay-window reading corner with its collection of works by Finnish poets. The furniture in the bay window has been covered by sheets, so you can relax there in the atmosphere of a villa that has been wrapped for the winter. Poetry also exerts its powerful presence in the exhibition events.


Dreams and Portents

For most of us nighttime is for sleep, and dreams are an essential part of this special time of day. As well as being a very private, unfathomable borderland of visions, dreams are both shared and universal. They take us into their own world, where anything can happen. 

The contents of our dreams change as the world changes around us. People are fascinated by dreams, and interpreting them is a common practice. The exhibition includes clean copies of the Finnish Literature Society’s archive cards from the 19th and 20th centuries documenting Finnish folklore about dreams and premonitions. These materials are from the archive’s tradition and contemporary-culture collection. Premonitory dreams often foresee coming into money, death, good and evil, and more. Visitors can also share their own remembered dreams by writing or drawing on cards and leaving them for others to see for the remainder of the exhibition period.

The exhibition invites us to savour the atmosphere of this special time of day that is familiar to all, while giving us a chance to experience poetry in a new context.



Exhibition curator:

Kersti Tainio


Events accompanying the exhibition:

17–21.2.2026 
13:00–16:00 
The Many Words of Night – Non-Stop Poetry Workshops in Winter Holiday Week

27.2, 27.3 and 24.4.2026 
15:00-18:00 
Poetry Bar

28.2.2026 
12:00–15:00 
Asemic craft club

22.4.2026 
17:30 
Nokturno’s experimental Open Mic “Night & Dreams”

27.5.2026 
17:30
Tuli & Savu’s Twilight Club




Oy Sinebrychoff Ab supports the operations of the Sinebrychoff Art Museum. 

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Images

A rabbit with shining eyes.
Saara Salmi (1981–): Rabbit, from the series: About Alice and the Rabbit, 2011. State Art Deposit Collection, Finnish National Gallery.
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Boats and people on the beach.
Ivan Aivazovski (1817–1900): The Bay of Naples, 1844. Finnish National Gallery Collection, Sinebrychoff Art Museum, collection Beatrice Granberg.
Finnish National Gallery / Aleks Talve.
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Behind the armchair is a ghost and a pig.
Mikko Ängeslevä (1982–): The Other Side, 2024. Finnish National Gallery Collection, Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma, The Fund of Päivi and Paavo Lipponen Art Collection, People's Culture Foundation.
Photo: Finnish National Gallery / Petri Virtanen.
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Links

The Sinebrychoff Art Museum

Tickets: Museum entry €21 Concessions €13 Museum Card, free of charge, Under 18s €0. Museum ticket purchased online €19. 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.

In 2026, the museum will be completely closed for renovations from January 12 to February 11, 2026. The House Museum and Art Collection (2nd floor) will be closed from January 7 to February 16, 2026. 
 
The Museum is also open on Mondays in July and August. Opening hours 1.7–31.8.2026: 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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