Sini Manninen
Sini Manninen | |
---|---|
Born | Joensuu, Finland | August 26, 1944
Died | September 23, 2012 Paris, France | (aged 68)
Education | Academy of Fine Arts, Helsinki |
Style | Naïve art |
Sini Manninen (26 August 1944, Joensuu, Finland – 23 September 2012, Paris, France) was a Finnish painter and artist, trained at the Académie des Beaux Arts de Helsinki in Finland. She produced the majority of her works in France, where she moved to in 1973, more precisely, to Montmartre region of Paris. Mastering many painting techniques (oil, acrylic, watercolors, ink, and charcoal) under various disciplines, naïve art remained her fondest style.
Biography[]
Family and childhood[]
A youngest daughter of Karelia, where her father officiated as a pastor before becoming a member of Parliament during the 1960s. Later, the family moved several kilometers to the small town of Liperi, where nature and its colors, as well as animals, will became an inexhaustible source of artistic inspiration.
and Elisabeth Budnik, Sini Manninen grew up in Joensuu,In 1965, she moved to Helsinki to enter the Academy of Fine Arts (Suomen taideakatemia) until 1969. During this time, she trained with other renowned artists such as Saara Tikka, Inari Krohn, Tarja Unkari, Kari Lindström and Risto Vilhunen. Between 1970 and 1973, she went to work in a herring plant in Norway to earn a living and participated in the Oslo Young Painter's Association in Norway from 1970 to 1977.
Parisian life[]
In 1973, she moved to Montmartre, in Paris, to live with her companion Jacques Blank, also a painter, whom she met in Norway.[1][2] While living in Paris, she showcased numerous exhibitions, as well as elsewhere in the world. Sini and Jacques’ everyday life took place at the Place du Tertre in Montmartre where they painted and sold their artwork. In 1980, Sini Manninen received a grant from the Finnish Foundation to attend the Cité internationale des arts[3] in Paris. That same year their first child was born, Solene, while their second child, Mikko was born shortly thereafter in 1982. Following the death of Jacques' father, Lucien Blank, in 1988, the family decided to seek a life conducive to the development of their children and their art.
Provincial life[]
In 1990, the family moved to Confolens,[4] a small town in the northeast Charente region, where they settled permanently. Nonetheless, in order to make a living, the two artists were forced to keep their small apartment in Montmartre, where they went regularly to continue painting on the Place du Tertre.[5] Sini Manninen actively painted for public and private exhibitions. Additionally, some works have been exhibited at the museum of naïve art in Vicq,[6] in Ile de France, as well as at the Art Museum of Matanzas in Cuba.
Expositions[]
1973–1977
- Gallery II, Stavanger, Norway
- Salon international « Paris Sud »
- Salon d'Automne Paris, France
- Cannes International, France
- XXVe Grand Prix International de Peinture de Deauville, Deauville, France
- Salon International des Beaux Arts, Paris, France
- Salon des Indépendants, Paris
- Art Center, Västeräs, Sweden
1978
- Salon d'automne, Paris, France
- Exhibition à la Mairie du IVe arrondissement de Paris, France
- Grand Prix International de Peinture de Deauville, Deauville, France
- Young Painters Exhibition
- Jeune Expression, Paris
- Solo Exhibition « Docent Duk » Stockholm, Sweden
1979
- Salon des Indépendants, Paris, France
- Salon des Artistes Français, Paris
- Exhibition Jeune Peinture
- Jeune Expression, Paris
- Solo Exhibition à Västeräs et Stockholm, Sweden
1980
- Exposition à la Mairie du XVIIIe arrondissement de Paris, France
- Salon des Indépendants, Paris, France
- Exposition Jeune Peinture
- Jeune Expression, Paris
- Solo Exhibition à Västeräs, Sweden
1981
- Exposition à la Mairie du XVIIIe arrondissement de Paris, France
- Exposition à l'Atelier 74, Paris
- Exposition à la Mairie du XIIIe arrondissement de Paris, France
- Exposition à la Cité Internationale des Arts de Paris, France
- Solo Exhibition, Helsinki, Finland
1982
- Exposition à la Mairie du XVIIe arrondissement de Paris, France
- Salon des Artistes Français, Paris
- Solo Exhibition, Ibi, Spain
1985
- Exhibition Gallery Lawrence Ross, Los Angeles, USA
1986
- Exhibition at Musée d'art Naïf Max Fourny, Paris Montmartre
1988
- Exhibition at the Cité internationale des Arts, à Paris
- XVIIe « Salon », Rueil-Malmaison, Paris
1989
- XVIIIe « Salon », Rueil-Malmaison, Paris, salle Pleyel, Public Show, Paris
1990
- Salon International d'Art Naïf, Marie du IVe arrondissement, Paris
1991
- Exposition des donateurs, Musée de la ville de Matanzas, Cuba
1992
- International Show of Naive Painter Art, Paris
- Private painting Show, Galerie Cheize d'Or, Poitiers
1993
- Exhibition « 3 en 1 », mairie de Confolens, Charente, France
- European Naifs, Holdsworth Galleries, Australia
- IIIe Exposition Internationale de Pontivy, France
1994
- International Show of Naive Painter Art, Paris
- Solo Exhibition, Galerie Cheize d'Or, Poitiers
1995
- Ve Exposition Internationale de Pontivy, France
- Solo Exhibition, Galerie Bröms, Helsinki Finland
1996
- Solo Exhibition, Galerie Cheize d'Or, Poitiers
1997
- Solo Exhibition, Alicante, Spain
- Study Benaiton, Angoulême, France
1998
- Solo Exhibition, Pyysaari, Helsinki, Finland
1999
- Group Exhibition, CNBDI, Angoulême, France
- Solo Exhibition, Alicante, Spain
- Solo Exhibition, Confolens, Charente, France
1999–2002
- Exhibition Gallery Broms, Liperi, Finland
2002
- Group Exhibition d'Art Naïf, Saint Junien, France
2003
- Solo Exhibition, Pyysaari, Helsinki, Finland
2005
- Solo Exhibition, Galerie Broms, Helsinki, Finland 2006
- Festival d'Art Naïf, Saint Junien
- Group Exhibition of Art Naif de Montivilliers, France
- Festival d'Art Naif, Verneuil sur Avre
2011
- Group Exhibition,"La Balade des Naïfs", The Connoisseur's Gallery , Paris VIe arrt
2012
- Group Exhibition, Association Art Montmartre, salle paroissiale de l'église Saint Pierre de Montmartre
2013
- Solo Exhibition, Pyysaari, Helsinki, Finland
2017
- Solo Exhibition, galerie de la Fontorse et Mairie de Confolens
References[]
- ^ Jean-Manuel Gabert (1e trimestre 2013). "Sini Manninen". Paris Montmartre.
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(help) - ^ Jean-Manuel Gabert (4e trimestre 2016). "Sini Manninen, la fille des neiges". Paris Montmartre.
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(help) - ^ "Parisin Taitelijakaupungin säätiö".
- ^ François Goubault (4 August 2017). ""Confolens merveilleux s'expose à la mairie de Confolens"". Charente Libre.
- ^ "Dictionnaire des peintres à Montmartre, peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs, dessinateurs, illustrateurs, plasticiens, au XIXe et XXe siècle".
- ^ "Les artistes naïfs de la collection Max Fourny". www.museevicq.fr/.
- 1944 births
- 2012 deaths
- 20th-century Finnish painters
- 21st-century Finnish painters
- Finnish emigrants to Norway
- Finnish painters
- Finnish women painters
- Immigrants to France
- Naïve painters