Alvar Aalto

Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto (pronounced [ˈhuːɡo ˈɑlʋɑr ˈhenrik ˈɑːlto]; 3 February 1898 – 11 May 1976) was a Finnish architect and designer.[1] His work includes architecture, furniture, textiles and glassware, as well as sculptures and paintings. He never regarded himself as an artist, seeing painting and sculpture as "branches of the tree whose trunk is architecture."[2] Aalto's early career ran in parallel with the rapid economic growth and industrialization of Finland during the first half of the 20th century. Many of his clients were industrialists, among them the Ahlström-Gullichsen family, who became his patrons.[3] The span of his career, from the 1920s to the 1970s, is reflected in the styles of his work, ranging from Nordic Classicism of the early work, to a rational International Style Modernism during the 1930s to a more organic modernist style from the 1940s onwards.

Alvar Aalto
Aalto in 1960
Born
Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto

(1898-02-03)3 February 1898
Died11 May 1976(1976-05-11) (aged 78)
Helsinki, Finland
NationalityFinnish
Alma materHelsinki University of Technology
OccupationArchitect
Spouses
(m. 1925; died 1949)
    (m. 1952)
    Children2
    AwardsPrince Eugen Medal (1954)
    RIBA Gold Medal (1957)
    AIA Gold Medal (1963)
    BuildingsPaimio Sanatorium
    Säynätsalo Town Hall
    Viipuri Library
    Villa Mairea
    Baker House
    Finlandia Hall
    ProjectsHelsinki City Centre
    DesignSavoy Vase
    Paimio Chair
    Signature

    His architectural work, throughout his entire career, is characterized by a concern for design as Gesamtkunstwerk—a total work of art in which he, together with his first wife Aino Aalto, would design not only the building but the interior surfaces, furniture, lamps, and glassware as well. His furniture designs are considered Scandinavian Modern, an aesthetic reflected in their elegant simplification and concern for materials, especially wood, but also in Aalto's technical innovations, which led him to receiving patents for various manufacturing processes, such as those used to produce bent wood.[4] As a designer he is celebrated as a forerunner of midcentury modernism in design; his invention of bent plywood furniture[5] had a profound impact on the aesthetics of Charles and Ray Eames and George Nelson.[6] The Alvar Aalto Museum, designed by Aalto himself, is located in what is regarded as his home city, Jyväskylä.[7]

    The entry for him on the Museum of Modern Art website notes his "remarkable synthesis of romantic and pragmatic ideas," adding

    His work reflects a deep desire to humanize architecture through an unorthodox handling of form and materials that was both rational and intuitive. Influenced by the so-called International Style modernism (or functionalism, as it was called in Finland) and his acquaintance with leading modernists in Europe, including Swedish architect Erik Gunnar Asplund and many of the artists and architects associated with the Bauhaus, Aalto created designs that had a profound impact on the trajectory of modernism before and after World War II.[8]

    Biography

    Life

    Auditorium of the Viipuri Municipal Library in the 1930s.
    Alvar Aalto Studio, Helsinki (1954–56)
    Alvar Aalto Studio, Helsinki (1954–55)
    Main Building of the Jyväskylä University (1955)

    Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto was born in Kuortane, Finland.[10] His father, Johan Henrik Aalto, was a Finnish-speaking land-surveyor and his mother, Selma Matilda "Selly" (née Hackstedt) was a Swedish-speaking postmistress. When Aalto was 5 years old, the family moved to Alajärvi, and from there to Jyväskylä in Central Finland.[11]

    He studied at the Jyväskylä Lyceum school, where he completed his basic education in 1916, and took drawing lessons from local artist Jonas Heiska. In 1916, he then enrolled to study architecture at the Helsinki University of Technology. His studies were interrupted by the Finnish Civil War, in which he fought. He fought on the side of the White Army and fought at the Battle of Länkipohja and the Battle of Tampere.[12]

    He built his first piece of architecture while a student; a house for his parents at Alajärvi.[13] Later, he continued his education, graduating in 1921. In the summer of 1922 he began military service, finishing at Hamina reserve officer training school, and was promoted to reserve second lieutenant in June 1923.[14]

    In 1920, while a student, Aalto made his first trip abroad, travelling via Stockholm to Gothenburg, where he briefly found work with architect Arvid Bjerke.[15] In 1922, he accomplished his first independent piece at the Industrial Exposition in Tampere.[13] In 1923, he returned to Jyväskylä, where he opened an architectural office under the name 'Alvar Aalto, Architect and Monumental Artist'. At that time he wrote articles for the Jyväskylä newspaper Sisä-Suomi under the pseudonym Remus.[14] During this time, he designed a number of small single-family houses in Jyväskylä, and the office's workload steadily increased.[11]

    On 6 October 1924, Aalto married architect Aino Marsio. Their honeymoon in Italy was Aalto's first trip there, though Aino had previously made a study trip there.[16] The latter trip together sealed an intellectual bond with the culture of the Mediterranean region that remained important to Aalto for life.

    On their return they continued with several local projects, notably the Jyväskylä Worker's Club, which incorporated a number of motifs which they had studied during their trip, most notably the decorations of the Festival hall modelled on the Rucellai Sepulchre in Florence by Leon Battista Alberti. After winning the architecture competition for the Southwest Finland Agricultural Cooperative building in 1927, the Aaltos moved their office to Turku. They had made contact with the city's most progressive architect, Erik Bryggman before moving. They began collaborating with him, most notably on the Turku Fair of 1928–29. Aalto's biographer, Göran Schildt, claimed that Bryggman was the only architect with whom Aalto cooperated as an equal.[17] With an increasing quantity of work in the Finnish capital, the Aaltos' office moved again in 1933 to Helsinki.[18]

    The Aaltos designed and built a joint house-office (1935–36) for themselves in Munkkiniemi, Helsinki, but later (1954–56) had a purpose-built office erected in the same neighbourhood – now the former is a "home museum" and the latter the premises of the Alvar Aalto Academy. In 1926, the young Aaltos designed and had built for themselves a summer cottage in Alajärvi, Villa Flora.[11]

    Aino and Alvar had two children, a daughter, Johanna "Hanni" (married surname Alanen; born 1925), and a son, Hamilkar Aalto (born 1928). Aino Aalto died of cancer in 1949.

    In 1952, Aalto married architect Elissa Mäkiniemi (died 1994). In 1952, he designed and built a summer cottage, the so-called Experimental House, for himself and his second wife, now Elissa Aalto, in Muuratsalo in Central Finland.[19] Alvar Aalto died on 11 May 1976, in Helsinki, and is buried in the Hietaniemi cemetery in Helsinki. Elissa Aalto became the director of the practice, running the office from 1976−1994. In 1978, the Museum of Finnish Architecture in Helsinki arranged a major exhibition of Aalto's works.

    Architecture career

    Early career: classicism

    Although he is sometimes regarded as among the first and most influential architects of Nordic modernism, closer examination reveals that Aalto (while a pioneer in Finland) closely followed and had personal contacts with other pioneers in Sweden, in particular Gunnar Asplund[20][21] and Sven Markelius.[22] What they and many others of that generation in the Nordic countries shared was a classical education and an approach to classical architecture that historians now call Nordic Classicism.[23] It was a style that had been a reaction to the previous dominant style of National Romanticism before moving, in the late 1920s, towards Modernism.[24]

    Upon returning to Jyväskylä in 1923 to establish his own architect's office, Aalto designed several single-family homes designed in the style of Nordic Classicism. For example, the manor-like house for his mother's cousin Terho Manner in Töysa (1923), a summer villa for the Jyväskylä chief constable (also from 1923) and the Alatalo farmhouse in Tarvaala (1924). During this period he completed his first public buildings, the Jyväskylä Workers' Club in 1925, the Jyväskylä Defence Corps Building in 1926 and the Seinäjoki Civil Guard House building in 1924–29. He entered several architectural competitions for prestigious state public buildings, in Finland and abroad. This included two competitions for the Finnish Parliament building in 1923 and 1924, the extension to the University of Helsinki in 1931, and the building to house the League of Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1926–27.

    Aalto's first church design to be completed, Muurame church, illustrates his transition from Nordic Classicism to Functionalism.[25]

    This was the period when Aalto was most prolific in his writings, with articles for professional journals and newspapers. Among his most well-known essays from this period are "Urban culture" (1924),[26] "Temple baths on Jyväskylä ridge" (1925),[27] "Abbé Coignard's sermon" (1925),[28] and "From doorstep to living room" (1926).[29]

    Facade of Baker House on the Charles River
    The main auditorium of the Helsinki University of Technology (now Aalto University) in Otaniemi, Finland (1949–66)
    House of Culture, Helsinki
    Cultural Center Wolfsburg (1958–62)[30]
    Finlandia Hall (1962–71)
    The Aalto-Theater opera house in Essen, Germany

    Early career: functionalism

    The shift in Aalto's design approach from classicism to modernism is epitomised by the Viipuri Library in Vyborg (1927–35), which went through a transformation from an originally classical competition entry proposal to the completed high-modernist building. His humanistic approach is in full evidence in the library: the interior displays natural materials, warm colours, and undulating lines. Due to problems related to financing, compounded by a change of site, the Viipuri Library project lasted eight years. During that time, Aalto designed the Standard Apartment Building (1928–29) in Turku, the Turun Sanomat Building (1929–30), and the Paimio Sanatorium (1929–32), which he designed in collaboration with his first wife Aino Aalto. A number of factors contributed to Aalto's shift towards modernism: his increased familiarity with international trends, facilitated by his travels throughout Europe; the opportunity to experiment with concrete prefabrication in the Standard Apartment Building; the cutting-edge Le Corbusier-inspired formal language of the Turun Sanomat Building; and Aalto's application of both in the Paimio Sanatorium and in the ongoing design for the library. Although the Turun Sanomat Building and Paimio Sanatorium are comparatively pure modernist works, they carried the seeds of his questioning of such an orthodox modernist approach and a move to a more daring, synthetic attitude. It has been pointed out that the planning principle for Paimio Sanatorium – the splayed wings – was indebted to the Zonnestraal Sanatorium (1925–31) by Jan Duiker, which Aalto visited while it was under construction.[31] While these early Functionalist bear hallmarks of influences from Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius, and other key modernist figures of central Europe, Aalto nevertheless started to show his individuality in a departure from such norms with the introduction of organic references.

    Through Sven Markelius, Aalto became a member of the Congres Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM), attending the second congress in Frankfurt in 1929 and the fourth congress in Athens in 1933, where he established a close friendship with László Moholy-Nagy, Sigfried Giedion, and Philip Morton Shand. It was during this time that he closely followed the work of the main force driving the new modernism, Le Corbusier, visiting him in his Paris office several times in the following years.

    It was not until the completion of the Paimio Sanatorium (1932) and Viipuri Library (1935) that Aalto first achieved world attention in architecture. His reputation grew in the US following the invitation to hold a retrospective exhibition of his works at MOMA in New York in 1938. (This was his first visit to the States.) The exhibition, which later went on a 12-city tour of the country, was a landmark: Aalto was the second-ever architect – after Le Corbusier – to have a solo exhibition at the museum. His reputation grew in the US following the critical reception of his design for the Finnish Pavilion at the 1939 New York World's Fair, described by Frank Lloyd Wright as a "work of genius".[32] It could be said that Aalto's international reputation was sealed with his inclusion in the second edition of Sigfried Giedion's influential book on Modernist architecture, Space, Time, and Architecture: The growth of a new tradition (1949), in which Aalto received more attention than any other Modernist architect, including Le Corbusier. In his analysis of Aalto, Giedion gave primacy to qualities that depart from direct functionality, such as mood, atmosphere, intensity of life, and even national characteristics, declaring that "Finland is with Aalto wherever he goes."

    Mid career: experimentation

    During the 1930s Alvar spent some time experimenting with laminated wood, sculpture and abstract relief, characterized by irregular curved forms. Utilizing this knowledge, he was able to solve technical problems concerning the flexibility of wood while at the same time working out spatial issues in his designs.[12] Aalto's early experiments with wood and his move away from a purist modernism would be tested in built form with the commission to design Villa Mairea (1939) in Noormarkku, the luxury home of young industrialist couple Harry and Maire Gullichsen. It was Maire Gullichsen who acted as the main client, and she worked closely not only with Alvar but also with Aino Aalto on the design, encouraging them to be more daring in their work. The building forms a U-shape around a central inner 'garden' whose central feature is a kidney-shaped swimming pool. Adjacent to the pool is a sauna executed in a rustic style, alluding to both Finnish and Japanese precedents. The design of the house is a synthesis of numerous stylistic influences, from traditional Finnish vernacular to purist modernism, as well as influences from English and Japanese architecture. While the house is clearly intended for a wealthy family, Aalto nevertheless argued that it was also an experiment that would prove useful in the design of mass housing.[33]

    His increased fame led to offers and commissions outside Finland. In 1941, he accepted an invitation as a visiting professor to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US. During the Second World War, he returned to Finland to direct the Reconstruction Office. After the war, he returned to MIT, where he designed the student dormitory Baker House, completed in 1949.[34] The dormitory flanked the Charles River, and its undulating form provided maximum view and ventilation for each resident.[35] This was the first building of Aalto's redbrick period. Originally used in Baker House to signify the Ivy League university tradition, Aalto went on to use it in a number of key buildings after his return to Finland, most notably in several of the buildings in the new Helsinki University of Technology campus (starting in 1950), Säynätsalo Town Hall (1952), Helsinki Pensions Institute (1954), Helsinki House of Culture (1958), as well as in his own summer house, the Experimental House in Muuratsalo (1957).[36]

    In the 1950s Aalto immersed himself in sculpting, exploring wood, bronze, marble, and mixed media. Among the notable works from this period is his 1960 memorial to the Battle of Suomussalmi. Located on the battlefield, it consists of a leaning bronze pillar on a pedestal.[12]

    Mature career: monumentalism

    Alvar Aalto's signature on the wall of the Jyväskylä theatre

    Foremost among Aalto's work from the early 1960s until his death in 1976 were his projects in Helsinki, in particular the huge town plan for the void in the centre of Helsinki adjacent to Töölö Bay and the vast railway yards, an area marked on the edges by significant buildings such as the National Museum and the main railway station, both by Eliel Saarinen. In his town plan, Aalto proposed a line of separate marble-clad buildings fronting the bay, which would house various cultural institutions, including a concert hall, opera, museum of architecture, and headquarters for the Finnish Academy. The scheme also extended into the Kamppi district with a series of tall office blocks. Aalto first presented his vision in 1961, but it went through various modifications during the early '60s. Only two fragments of the overall plan were realized: the Finlandia Hall concert hall (1976) fronting on Töölö Bay and an office building in the Kamppi district for the Helsinki Electricity Company (1975). Aalto also employed the Miesian formal language of geometric grids used in those buildings for other sites in Helsinki, including the Enso-Gutzeit headquarters building (1962), the Academic Bookstore (1962), and the SYP Bank building (1969).

    Following Aalto's death in 1976, his office continued to operate under the direction of his widow Elissa, who oversaw the completion of works already designed (to some extent), among them the Jyväskylä City Theatre and Essen opera house. Since the death of Elissa Aalto, the office has continued to operate as the Alvar Aalto Academy, giving advice on the restoration of Aalto buildings and organizing the practice's vast archives.

    Furniture career

    Paimio chair
    Model 60 stacking stools

    Although Aalto was famous for his architecture, his furniture designs were admired and are still popular today. He studied with the architect-designer Josef Hoffmann at the Wiener Werkstätte(engl.: "Vienna Workshop") and worked, for a time, under Eliel Saarinen.[4] He also drew inspiration from Gebrüder Thonet.[4] During the late 1920s and 1930s, he worked closely with Aino Aalto on his furniture designs, a focus due in part to his decision to design many of the individual furniture pieces and lamps for the Paimio Sanatorium. Of particular significance was the Aaltos' experimentation in bent plywood chairs, most notably the so-called Paimio chair, designed for tuberculosis patients, and the Model 60 stacking stool. The Aaltos, together with visual arts promoter Maire Gullichsen and art historian Nils-Gustav Hahl, founded the Artek company in 1935, ostensibly to sell Aalto products but which also imported pieces by other designers.[37] Aalto became the first furniture designer to use the cantilever principle in chair designs using wood.[4]

    Awards

    Aalto's awards included the Prince Eugen Medal in 1954, the Royal Gold Medal for Architecture from the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1957 and the Gold Medal from the American Institute of Architects in 1963. He was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1957.[38] He also was a member of the Academy of Finland, and was its president from 1963 to 1968. From 1925 to 1956 he was a member of the Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne. In 1960 he received an honorary doctorate at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).[39]

    Works

    Aalto's career spans the changes in style from (Nordic Classicism) to purist International Style Modernism to a more personal, synthetic, and idiosyncratic Modernism. Aalto's wide field of design activity ranges from large-scale projects such as city planning and architecture to more intimate, human-scale work in interior design, furniture and glassware design, and painting. It has been estimated that during his entire career Aalto designed over 500 individual buildings, approximately 300 of which were built. The vast majority of them are in Finland. He also has a few buildings in France, Germany, Italy, and the US.[40]

    Aalto's work with wood was influenced by early Scandinavian architects. His experiments and bold departures from aesthetic norms brought attention to his ability to make wood do things not previously done. His techniques in the way he cut beech wood, for example, and his ability to use plywood as a structural element while at the same time exploiting its aesthetic properties, were at once technically innovative and artistically inspired. Other examples of his boundary-pushing sensibility include the vertical placement of rough-hewn logs at his pavilion at the Lapua expo, a design element that evoked a medieval barricade. At the orchestra platform at Turku and the Paris expo at the World Fair, he used varying sizes and shapes of planks. Also at Paris (and at Villa Mairea), he utilized birch boards in a vertical arrangement. His Vyborg Library, built in what was then Viipuri (it became Vyborg after Soviet annexation in 1944), is acclaimed for its stunning ceiling, with its undulating waves of red-hearted pine (which grows in the region ).[41] In his roofing, he created massive spans (155-foot at the covered stadium at Otaniemi), all without tie rods. In his stairway at Villa Mairea, he evokes the feeling of a natural forest by binding beech wood with withes into columns.[42]

    Aalto claimed that his paintings were not made as individual artworks but as part of his process of architectural design, and many of his small-scale "sculptural" experiments with wood led to later larger architectural details and forms. These experiments also led to a number of patents: for example, he invented a new form of laminated bent-plywood furniture in 1932 (which was patented in 1933).[1] His experimental method had been influenced by his meetings with various members of the Bauhaus design school, especially László Moholy-Nagy, whom he first met in 1930. Aalto's furniture was exhibited in London in 1935, to great critical acclaim. To cope with the consumer demand, Aalto, together with his wife Aino, Maire Gullichsen, and Nils-Gustav Hahl founded the company Artek that same year. Aalto glassware (Aino as well as Alvar) is manufactured by Iittala.

    Aalto's 'High Stool' and 'Stool E60' (manufactured by Artek) are currently used in Apple Stores across the world to serve as seating for customers. Finished in black lacquer, the stools are used to seat customers at the 'Genius Bar' and also in other areas of the store at times when seating is required for a product workshop or special event. Aalto was also influential in bringing modern art to the attention of the Finnish people, in particular the work of his friends Alexander Milne Calder and Fernand Léger.[12]

    Significant buildings

    Church of Santa Maria Assunta, Riola of Vergato, Italy, designed in 1966 and built 1975–1978. Photo by Paolo Monti, 1980.
    Table and chairs designed by Alvar Aalto
    Tea cart (tea trolley)
    Armchair 400 with reindeer fur

    Furniture and glassware

    Chairs
    Lamps
    • 1954: Floor lamp A805
    • 1959: Floor lamp A810
    Vases

    Quotations

    • "God created paper for the purpose of drawing architecture on it. Everything else, at least for me, is a misuse of paper." Alvar Aalto, "In lieu of an article", Arkkitehti no. 1-2, 1958.
    • "We should work for simple, good, undecorated things...things which are in harmony with the human being and organically suited to the little man in the street." Alvar Aalto, speech in London 1957.
    • "It’s not an art to take and copy everything from tradition or past. It’s necessary to take the material and energy from nature and respond with the work of art, bringing your own psychical energy into it. We are prone to take everything from nature without giving anything in return. That’s not good – it can take a revenge on us.”[60]

    Critique of Aalto's architecture

    As mentioned above, Aalto's international reputation was sealed with his inclusion in the second edition of Sigfried Giedion's influential book on Modernist architecture, Space, Time and Architecture: The growth of a new tradition (1949), in which Aalto received more attention than any other Modernist architect, including Le Corbusier. In his analysis of Aalto, Giedion gave primacy to qualities that depart from direct functionality, such as mood, atmosphere, intensity of life and even national characteristics, declaring that "Finland is with Aalto wherever he goes."

    More recently, however, some architecture critics and historians have questioned Aalto's influence on the historical canon. The Italian Marxist architecture historians Manfredo Tafuri and Francesco Dal Co contend that Aalto's "historical significance has perhaps been rather exaggerated; with Aalto we are outside of the great themes that have made the course of contemporary architecture so dramatic. The qualities of his works have a meaning only as masterful distractions, not subject to reproduction outside the remote reality [sic] in which they have their roots."[61] At the heart of their critique was the perception of Aalto's work as unsuited to the urban context: "Essentially, his architecture is not appropriate to urban typologies."

    At the other end of the political spectrum (though similarly concerned with the appropriateness of Aalto's formal language), the American cultural theorist and architectural historian Charles Jencks singled out his Pensions Institute as an example of what he termed the architect's "soft paternalism": "Conceived as a fragmented mass to break up the feeling of bureaucracy, it succeeds all too well in being humane and killing the pensioner with kindness. The forms are familiar – red brick and ribbon-strip windows broken by copper and bronze elements – all carried through with a literal-mindedness that borders on the soporific."[62]

    During his lifetime, Aalto faced criticisms from his fellow architects in Finland, most notably Kirmo Mikkola and Juhani Pallasmaa. By the last decade of Aalto's life, his work was seen as unfashionably individualistic at a time when the opposing tendencies of rationalism and constructivism – often championed under left-wing politics – argued for anonymous, aggressively non-aesthetic architecture. Of Aalto's late works, Mikkola wrote, "Aalto has moved to [a] baroque line..."[63]

    Alvar Aalto portrayed on a stamp published in 1976

    Memorials

    Aalto has been commemorated in a number of ways:

    • Alvar Aalto is the eponym of the Alvar Aalto Medal, now considered one of world architecture's most prestigious awards.
    • Aalto was featured in the 50 mk note in the last series of the Finnish markka (before its replacement by the Euro in 2002).
    • The centenary of Aalto's birth in 1998 was marked in Finland not only by several books and exhibitions, but also by the promotion of specially bottled red and white Aalto Wine and a specially designed cupcake.
    • In 1976, the year of his death, Aalto was commemorated on a Finnish postage stamp.
    • Piazza Alvar Aalto, a square named after Aalto, can be found in the Porta Nuova business district of Milan, Italy.
    • Aalto University, a Finnish university formed by merging Helsinki University of Technology, Helsinki School of Economics and TaiK in 2010, is named after Alvar Aalto.
    • An Alvar Aallon katu (Alvar Aalto Street) can be found in five different Finnish cities: Helsinki, Jyväskylä, Oulu, Kotka and Seinäjoki.
    • In 2017, the Alvar Aalto Museum launched Alvar Aalto Cities, that is, a network of cities containing buildings by Alvar Aalto.[64] The objective of the network is to increase awareness of Aalto's work both in Finland and abroad. It is hoped that by combining forces on communications and marketing, the visibility and accessibility of exhibitions, tourist attractions and events will be improved. To date, the network city members are: Aalborg, Alajärvi, Espoo, Eura, Hamina, Helsinki, Imatra, Jyväskylä, Järvenpää, Kotka, Kouvola, Lahti, Oulu, Paimio, Pori, Raseborg, Rovaniemi, Seinäjoki, Turku, Vantaa and Varkaus. It is estimated that in total there would be 40 cities worldwide that would qualify as an Alvar Aalto City.

    See also

    References

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    2. Enckell 1998, p. 32
    3. Anon 2013
    4. Boyce 1985, p. 1
    5. Norwich, John Julius (1990). Oxford Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Arts. US: Oxford University Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-19-869137-2.
    6. "Alvar Aalto". www.dwr.com.
    7. Alvar Aalto Museum 2011
    8. "Alvar Aalto". www.moma.org.
    9. Heilig-Geist-Kirchengemeinde bei kirche-wolfsburg.de, retrieved 27 February 2018.
    10. Thorne 1984, p. 1
    11. "Alvar Aalto". www.architecture-history.org. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
    12. Pelkonen 2009, p. 201
    13. Labò 1968, p. 1
    14. Heporauta 1999, p. 10
    15. Weston 1997, p. 20
    16. Suominen-Kokkonen 2007, p. 18
    17. Schildt 1994, p. 54
    18. Heporauta 1999, p. 24
    19. Guimaraes, M. (2012). "A precedent in sustainable architecture: Alvar Aalto's summer house". Journal of Green Building. 7 (2): 64–73. doi:10.3992/jgb.7.2.64.
    20. Paavilainen 1982, p. 23
    21. Aalto 1998, p. 29
    22. Aalto 1998, p. 76
    23. Paavilainen 1982, pp. 11–15
    24. Wilson, Colin St J. WilsonSir Colin St J. (1 January 2009), "Aalto, Hugo Alvar Henrik", The Oxford Companion to Architecture, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780198605683.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-860568-3, retrieved 6 July 2021
    25. "Alvar Aallon nuoruudensynti remontoidaan alkuperäiseen loistoonsa" [Alvar Aalto's 'aberration of youth' to be restored to its original glory] (in Finnish). Yle. 31 March 2015. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
    26. Aalto 1998, pp. 19–20
    27. Aalto 1998, pp. 17–19
    28. Aalto 1998, pp. 56–57
    29. Aalto 1998, pp. 49–55
    30. Das Alvar-Aalto-Kulturhaus auf der Website des Alvar Aalto Zentrums Deutschland e.V. Wolfsburg, retrieved 25 January 2015
    31. Hipeli 2014, p. 116
    32. McCarter 2006, p. 143
    33. Pallasmaa 1998, p. 31
    34. Vitra Design Museum.
    35. Anderson 2013
    36. McCormick, Megan. "Architects' summer retreats". Architecture Today. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
    37. Pallasmaa 1998, p. 19
    38. Tourney 2013
    39. Anon 2014
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    41. Labò 1968, p. 2
    42. Labò 1968, p. 3
    43. "Alvar Aalto Architect | Biography, Buildings, Projects and Facts". Famous Architects. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
    44. Kairamo 2009, pp. 34–35
    45. Weston 1997, pp. 47–48
    46. Hipeli 2014, p. 9
    47. "Villa Tammekann · Finnish Architecture Navigator". finnisharchitecture.fi. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
    48. Korvenmaa 2004
    49. Pallasmaa 1998
    50. Holma 2015
    51. "AD Classics: Maison Louis Carré / Alvar Aalto". ArchDaily. 6 April 2013.
    52. Laaksonen 2008
    53. Paatero 1993, pp. 65–74
    54. Eisenbrand 2014, pp. 361–382
    55. "The Building". kunsten.dk. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
    56. Eisenbrand 2014, pp. 339–359
    57. "Alvar Aalto's legacy lives strong in Wolfsburg, Germany | Design Stories". Finnish Design Shop COM. 31 January 2020. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
    58. "Alvar Aalto". www.architecture-history.org. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
    59. Paatero 1993, pp. 105–112
    60. "Himassa Blog". himassa.com. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
    61. Tafuri & Co 1976, p. 338
    62. Jencks 1973, pp. 80–81
    63. Mikkola 1969, p. 31
    64. "Alvar Aalto Cities". Alvar Aalto Foundation | Alvar Aalto -säätiö.

    Sources

    • Aalto, Alvar (1998). Schildt, Goran (ed.). Alvar Aalto in His Own Words. Helsinki, Finland: Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-2080-1.
    • Alvar Aalto Museum (2011). "Alvar Aalto Museo" [Alvar Aalto Museum]. www.alvaraalto.fi.
    • Anderson, Stanford (2013). Fenske, Gail; Fixler, David (eds.). Aalto and America. Cambridge, MASS: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-300-17600-1.
    • Anon (2014). "Honorary Doctors". NTNU (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 2 January 2014. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
    • Anon (2013). "Alvar Aalto : architect biography". architect.architecture.sk. Architecture.sk.
    • Anon. "Biography Alvar Aalto 1898–1976" (PDF). Vitra Design Museum.
    • Boyce, Charles (1985). "Aalto, Hugo Alvar Henrik (1899–1976)". Dictionary of Furniture. New York, NY: Henry Holt and Co. ISBN 0-8050-0752-0.
    • Brown, Theodore M. (1969). "Alto, Hugo Alvar Henrik". In Myers, Bernard S. (ed.). McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Art. Vol. I: AA-Ceylon. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Book Company. LCCN 68026314.
    • Chilvers, Ian, ed. (2004) [1988]. "Aalto, Alvar". The Oxford Dictionary of Art (3rd ed.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860476-9.
    • Enckell, Ulla (1998). Alvar Aalto: Taiteilija – Konstnären – The Artist. Helsinki: Amos Anderson Museum. ISBN 952-9531-25-7.
    • Heporauta, Arne (1999). Alvar Aalto: Arkkitehti / Architect 1898–1976 (in Finnish) (1st ed.). Helsinki, Finland: Rakennustieto. ISBN 951-682-546-X.
    • Eisenbrand, Jochen, ed. (2014). Alvar Aalto – Second Nature. Weil am Rhein: Vitra Design Museum. ISBN 978-3-931936-93-8.
    • Hipeli, Mia, ed. (2014). Paimio Sanatorium 1929-33: Alvar Aalto Architect Volume 5. Helsinki: Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 978-952-267-074-8.
    • Holma, Marjo, ed. (2015). House of Culture. Jyväskylä: Alvar Aalto Museum.
    • Jencks, Charles (1973). Modern Movements in Architecture. Garden City, NY: Anchor Press. ISBN 978-0-385-02554-6.
    • Kairamo, Maija, ed. (2009). Alvar Aalto Library in Vyborg: Saving a Modern Masterpiece. Helsinki: Rakennustieto. ISBN 978-951-682-938-1.
    • Korvenmaa, Pekka, ed. (2004). Sunila 1936-54: Alvar Aalto Architect Volume 7. Helsinki: Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 952-5498-03-4.
    • Laaksonen, Esa, ed. (2008). Maison Louis Carré 1956-61: Alvar Aalto Architect Volume 20. Helsinki: Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 978-952-5371-43-7.
    • Labò, Mario (1968) [1959]. "Aalto, Hugo Alvar Henrik". In Crandall, Robert W. (ed.). Encyclopedia of World Art. Vol. I: Aalto-Asia Minor, Western. New York, NY: McGraw Hill Book Company, Inc. LCCN 59013433.
    • McCarter, Robert (2006). Frank Lloyd Wright. London: Reaktion Books. ISBN 978-1-86189-268-3.
    • Mikkola, Kirmo (1969). "Suomalaisen arkkitehtuurin ajankohtaista pyrkimyksiä". Arkkitehti (in Finnish). 66: 30–37.
    • Paatero, Kristiina, ed. (1993). The Line – Original Drawings from the Alvar Aalto Archive. Helsinki: Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 951-9229-81-7.
    • Paavilainen, Simo, ed. (1982). Nordisk Klassicism – 1910–1930 [Nordic Classicism]. Helsinki: Museum of Finnish Architecture. ISBN 951-9229-21-3.
    • Pallasmaa, Juhani (1998). Alvar Aalto: Villa Mairea 1938–39 (2nd ed.). Ram Pubns & Dist. ISBN 978-952-5371-31-4.
    • Pelkonen, Eeva-Liisa (2009). Alvar Aalto: Architecture, Modernity, and Geopolitics. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11428-7.
    • Schildt, Göran (1994). Alvar Aalto, A life's work: Architecture, Design and Art. Helsinki, Finland: Otava Pub. Co. ISBN 978-951-1-12975-2.
    • Suominen-Kokkonen, Renja (2007). Aino and Alvar Aalto – A Shared Journey – Interpretations of an everyday modernism. Helsinki: Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 978-952-5371-32-1.
    • Tafuri, Manfredo; Co, Francesco Dal (1976). Architettura contemporanea [Modern Architecture] (in Italian). Milan: Electa.
    • Thorne, John, ed. (1984). "Aalto, Alvar". Chambers Biographical Dictionary (Revised ed.). Chambers. ISBN 0-550-18022-2.
    • Weston, Richard (1997) [1995]. Alvar Aalto. London, UK: Phaidon Press Limited. ISBN 978-0-7148-3710-9.
    • Tourney, Michele (2013). "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter A" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 13 November 2013.

    Further reading

    Göran Schildt has written and edited many books on Aalto, the most well-known being the three-volume biography, usually referred to as the definitive biography on Aalto.

    • Schildt, Göran (1984). Alvar Aalto. The Early Years. New York, NY: Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-0531-0.
    • Schildt, Göran (1987). Alvar Aalto. The Decisive Years. New York, NY: Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-0711-6.
    • Schildt, Göran (1991). Alvar Aalto. The Mature Years. New York, NY: Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-1329-2.
    • Alvar Aalto Archive Staff (1994). The Architectural Drawings of Alvar Aalto 1917–1939: Aalto's Own Home in Helsinki, the Finnish Pavilion at the 1937 World's Fair in Paris, and Other Buildings and Projects, 1932–1937. Garland Architectural Archives. Routledge.
    • Schildt, Göran (1994). Alvar Aalto: The Complete Catalogue of Architecture, Design and Art. New York, NY: Rizzoli. ISBN 978-0-8478-1818-1.

    Other books

    • Dietziker, Céline; Gruntz, Lukas (2022). Aalto in Detail. A Catalogue of Components. Birkhäuser Verlag. ISBN 978-3-03562-332-1.
    • Laaksonen, Esa (2013). Alvar Aalto Architect. Vol. 5: Paimio Sanatorium 1928–32. Rakennustieto Publishing. ISBN 978-951-682-954-1.
    • Holma, Maija; Pallasmaa, Juhani; Suominen-Kokkonen, Renja (2003). Alvar Aalto Architect. Vol. 6: The Aalto House 1935–36. Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 978-952-5498-01-1.
    • Korvenmaa, Pekka, ed. (2007). Alvar Aalto Architect. Vol. 7: Sunila 1936–1954. Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 978-952-5498-03-5.
    • Aalto, Alvar (2008). Alvar Aalto Architect. Vol. 13: University of Technology, Otaniemi 1949–74. Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 978-952-5498-08-0.
    • Hipeli, Mia (2009). Alvar Aalto Architect. Vol. 16: Jyväskylä University 1951–71. ASIN B002QH2LMK.
    • Aalto, Alvar (2008). Alvar Aalto Architect. Vol. 20: Maison Louis Carre 1956–63. Alvar Aalto Foundation. ISBN 978-952-5498-06-6.
    • Heporauta, Arne (1998). Alvar Aalto Arkkitehti: 1898–1976 (in Finnish). Helsinki, Finland: Rakennustieto Oy. ISBN 978-951-682-546-8.
    • Fleig, Karl (1975). Alvar Aalto. Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-275-49660-9.
    • Pearson, Paul David (1978). Alvar Aalto and the International Style. New York: Whitney Library of Design. ISBN 0-8230-7023-9.
    • Porphyrios, Demetri (1982). Sources of Modern Eclecticism. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-74673-5.
    • Pallasmaa, Juhani (1985). Aalto: Alvar Aalto Furniture. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-13206-0.
    • Korvenmaa, Pekka; Treib, Marc (2002). Reed, Peter (ed.). Alvar Aalto: Between Humanism and Materialism. New York, NY: The Museum of Modern Art. ISBN 978-0-87070-107-8.
    • Quantrill, Malcolm (1983). Alvar Aalto: A Critical Study. Secker & Warburg. ISBN 0-941533-35-2.
    • Ruusuvuori, Aarno, ed. (1978). Alvar Aalto 1898–1976. Helsinki, Finland: The Museum of Finnish Architecture. ASIN B0000ED4GS.
    • Jormakka, Kari; Gargus, Jacqueline; Graf, Douglas The Use and Abuse of Paper. Essays on Alvar Aalto. Datutop 20: Tampere 1999.
    • Connah, Roger (2008). Aaltomania. Rakennustieto Publishing. ISBN 978-951-682-613-7.

    Aalto research

    • The extensive archives of Alvar Aalto are nowadays kept at the Alvar Aalto Museum, Jyväskylä, Finland. Material is also available from the former offices of Aalto, at Tiilimäki 20, Helsinki, nowadays the headquarters of the Alvar Aalto Foundation.
    • Since 1995 the Alvar Aalto Museum and Aalto Academy has published a journal, Ptah, which is devoted not only to Aalto scholarship but also to architecture generally as well as theory, design and art.

    Archives

    Resources

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