Hilkka Toivola

Hilkka Terttu Hilda Toivola (born June 20, 1909 in Akaa, Pirkanmaa; d. 2002) was a Finnish artist who created many stained-glass works, particularly for churches.

Hilkka Toivola in 1947.

Biography

Toivola's parents were train engine driver Herman Frederick Toivola and Hilda Emilia Tammi. Both her mother and her older brother had also studied art in Turku. She studied at the Turku Art Academy (Turun piirustuskoulu) from 1932 to 1935, graduating with honours. Toivola also studied with glass painters Giovanni Toller in Florence (1938) and Pierre Gaudin in Paris (1951). At the Turku Art Academy she was a drawing instructor (1942–1945, 1964–1969) and later its rector (1969–1973).

Toivola married the painter Otso Karpakka (1914-2005); both were involved in Ryhmä 9, a Turku-based artists' collective that functioned from 1951 to 1959. The couple were unusual in having worked alongside each other as artists for some 60 years, cooperating in the creation of several large frescoes and stained-glass pieces. Nevertheless, they each had separate artistic careers. The Wäinö Aaltonen Museum of Art mounted a large exhibition featuring 600 Toivola and Karpakka works (2006–2007), and published a bilingual Finnish-Swedish book on the artist couple's lives and work.[1]

In 1943, she received a 10,000-mark prize in a mural competition sponsored by Helsinki art dealer Ivar Hörhammer. In 1970 Toivola was awarded the Pro Finlandia Medal.

Notes

  1. Hilkka Toivola ja Otso Karpakka, Yhdessä elettyä. Wäinö Aaltosen museo, 2006. ISBN 952-9565-51-8



gollark: How many bots do you have?
gollark: I wonder if I can gain support now by promising to be supreme global dictator later.
gollark: I'm not communistic. That is correct.
gollark: My political ideology is whatever would mean I would be supreme global dictator.
gollark: Although I reserve the right to interpret this as communism.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.