Sinebrychoffin Taidemuseo

Invitation to an exhibition preview and book launch at 10:00 on Tuesday, 3.3.2026: 19th-century businesswoman Anna Sinebrychoff was an achiever who believed in doing charity work and supporting culture

17.2.2026 08:50:00 EET | Sinebrychoffin Taidemuseo | Press release

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The Anna Sinebrychoff – Ahead of Her Time exhibition and publication introduce the revered matriarch of the Sinebrychoff brewing family. In the context of the 19th century, Anna Sinebrychoff wielded unprecedented power at the head of a large company. Besides that, she did important charity work and supported culture and art. Anna was aware of her own influence, as evidenced by the six portraits she commissioned of herself, which are now on display together for the first time in this exhibition. 

Welcome to the preview at 10:00 on Tuesday, 3.3.2026. Please register: merja.haikio@siff.fi  

A woman is sitting on a chair with large green plants in the background.
Albert Edelfelt (1854–1905): Portrait of Mrs. Anna Sinebrychoff, 1884. Finnish National Gallery Collection, Ateneum Art Museum. Finnish National Gallery / Jenni Nurminen

Exhibition preview and book launch  
10:00, Tuesday, 3.3.2026
Museum Director Kirsi Eskelinen will introduce the publication and Chief Curator Ira Westergård, will introduce the exhibition, which she curated.
Register for the press event: merja.haikio@siff.fi



Anna Sinebrychoff – Ahead of Her Time  
3.3.2026–29.8.2027 
Sinebrychoff Art Museum


Anna Sinebrychoff (1830–1904) was an exception in Finland at the end of the 19th century, when the world of business was a place for men. After the death of her husband Paul Sinebrychoff (1799–1883), she ran one of Finland’s most successful companies, the Sinebrychoff Brewery. Anna single-mindedly managed both the family and the family business, bequeathing a sizable legacy to her children.

The Sinebrychoff Art Museum occupies the family’s house on Bulevardi, where Anna Sinebrychoff lived for more than 50 years. Her life is closely tied to the history of the Museum. The Anna Sinebrychoff – Ahead of Her Time exhibition and publication are based on research that has uncovered new, more detailed and accurate information about the life of this exceptional woman.

“Anna deserves recognition. In recent decades, influential women in history have been in the spotlight, and Anna definitely belongs among them. She is one of the very few women in the 19th century who, after the death of her husband, took over management of a company’s operations,” says Museum Director Kirsi Eskelinen.

Besides running the business, Anna was active in many areas of society, such as charity work, associations and societies, supporting culture, gardening, and the Orthodox congregation. The exhibition and book give a comprehensive overview of Anna Sinebrychoff’s life and work in Helsinki from the 1850s onwards, placing her at the centre of the social and economic changes of her time.

The exhibition features an exceptionally fine series of portraits of Anna. The most famous Finnish portrait painter of the 19th century, Albert Edelfelt (1854–1905), made four large portraits of her, which are now being shown together for the first time. In the 1890s, Anna commissioned two more portraits of herself from the artist Gunnar Berndtson (1854–1895), which are now on public display for the first time. The exhibition has been curated by Chief Curator, Ira Westergård, PhD.


From educated girl to member of the cultural elite and a position of power

Anna Jefimovna Tichanoff  was born in Turku in 1830. She received a bourgeois girl’s education and moved to Helsinki at the age of 17 to work for the Russian merchant Paul Sinebrychoff, who was looking for a housekeeper. In 1850, Paul and Anna were married. Paul was a well-known, successful merchant 30 years older than she was. For Anna, marriage meant stepping into a completely new role.

They had four children: Maria (1852), Anna (1854), Nicolas (1856) and Paul (1859). In the 1860s, after the birth of her fourth child, Anna Sinebrychoff expanded her own sphere of activity outside the home and family. At that time, women had ever-better opportunities to participate actively in the advancement of society. She was a member of the women’s network and active in the Red Cross, the Sewing Society, and more, and was involved in founding the Finnish Horticultural Association.

Anna was known for her exceptionally wide-ranging charity work, which became her life’s mission. She focused on the century’s major social problems, such as combatting poverty, promoting the nation’s educational ideals, and supporting national cultural projects.

“In Anna’s case charity work also involved contradictions. The production, sale and consumption of alcohol brought prosperity to the family. Yet, at the same time, poverty, drunkenness and other social ills were evident in the districts around workers’ homes,” says exhibition curator Ira Westergård.

The urban residence on Bulevardi stood on the same plot of land as the brewery and was at the heart of Anna’s life. All day-to-day business matters were dealt with in Anna and Paul Sinebrychoff’s house. The doors to the inner circle of the elite opened fully in 1863, when Paul was granted the title of Commercial Counsellor. Dances and concerts were held in their Bulevardi home. Its windows overlooked the family’s garden and greenhouses. This was one of the biggest gardens in Helsinki at the time, and the Sinebrychoff (“Koff”) Park still delights city residents on that same spot.

Anna Sinebrychoff was widowed at the age of 52. Right after her husband’s death, she submitted an official notification to the local register office saying that she intended to carry on his business operations. She became a majority shareholder in the Sinebrychoff’s family business. Anna’s son, Paul Junior, was Managing Director when the family business was made into a limited company in 1888. Anna became Chair of the Board and remained in that position until her death.


The patron of the arts expanded her wealth and supported art

Anna inherited a large fortune from her husband and, for the rest of her life, determinedly added to it. Her wealth grew significantly and Anna continued to support culture and art, in addition to her charity work. 

Anna and Paul Sinebrychoff belonged to the early group of art collectors in the 1860s and 1870s, when the Finnish artworld was only just emerging. Paul was a member of the Finnish Art Society and the couple bought artworks from young Finnish artists. Anna acquired art independently for her home and, on becoming a widow, commissioned a total of four portraits of herself from Albert Edelfelt, the first one a little before the artis´s international breakthrough.

“At that time, Anna stood out as the only woman among the art collectors and patrons of the arts. She was a pioneer in business, in supporting art, and in charity work,” says Chief Curator Ira Westergård.

The exhibition and publication offer insights into Anna Sinebrychoff’s life and work. The Sinebrychoff Art Museum occupies the brewery family’s urban home on Bulevardi. The furniture in the House Museum’s Empire Room has remained unchanged and has been preserved as a reminder of Anna Sinebrychoff’s time as mistress of the house.



Exhibition curator:
Ira Westergård


Exhibition publication (in Finnish and Swedish)
Anna Sinebrychoff – Edelläkävijä 
Editor-in-Chief: Hanna-Leena Paloposki, PhD
Publisher: Parvs Publishing Company

Authors
Julia Donner, PhD 
Kirsi Eskelinen, PhD, Museum Director, Sinebrychoff Art Museum / Finnish National Gallery 
Niklas Jensen-Eriksen, Professor 
Teppo Jokinen, Docent
Hanna Kemppi, PhD 
Tutta Palin, Professor 
Alexandra Ramsay, PhD 
Ira Westergård, PhD, Chief Curator, Sinebrychoff Art Museum / Finnish National Gallery


The exhibition publication has been supported by: KAMU Espoo City Museum, Friends of the Sinebrychoff Art Museum, the Swedish Cultural Foundation in Finland, and Oy Sinebrychoff Ab.


Lenders of works:
The Fortum Art Foundation’s collections
Gösta Serlachius Fine Arts Foundation 
Helsinki City Museum 
Rikhard and Henri Grahn
Private collections




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

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Contacts

Images

A woman is sitting on a chair with large green plants in the background.
Albert Edelfelt (1854–1905): Portrait of Mrs. Anna Sinebrychoff, 1884. Finnish National Gallery Collection, Ateneum Art Museum.
Finnish National Gallery / Jenni Nurminen
Download
A person is sitting on a chair and there is a large green plant in the background.
Gunnar Berndtson (1854–1895): Anna Sinebrychoff, 1894. Private collection.
Finnish National Gallery / Jenni Nurminen
Download
A person is sitting on a couch with a walking stick in her hand.
Albert Edelfelt (1854–1905): Portrait of Mrs. Anna Sinebrychoff, 1892. Finnish National Gallery Collection / Ateneum Art Museum.
Finnish National Gallery / Aleks Talve
Download

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. 
 
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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