Wäinö Aaltonen

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Wäinö Aaltonen (1894-1966) was a Finnish 20th Century artist.

He was born to a tailor in the village of Marttila, Finland. He went into art after being deaf as a child - attending the School of Drawing of the Turku Art Association from age 16, or specifically between 1910 and 1915. He had spent many of the early years at this school studying painting, but turned to sculpture by the time he left. As the Republic of Finland arose, and the First World War raged - he sculpted War Memorials. He soon became a nationalist icon, the exemplar Finn - establishing an exhibition in Stockholm in 1927.

As one would expect, his sculpture is nationalist in nature - often casts or sculptures of other national heroes. An example is the 1925 sculpture of Paavo Nurmi - a cast of which is exhibited outside the Helsinki stadium. Another notable work is that of Sibelius, a bust of 1928. These two works, like the main body of his work, are bronze casts - though he did work in stone and even glass. Though chiefly naturalistic, there are notable Cubist touches throughout.