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Artists

  • ? akseli gallen-kallela 4
  • ? finnish 18

Copyright

  • ? kansallisgalleria 15

Characters

  • ? aino 2
  • ? vainamoinen 1

General

  • ? 1800s 46
  • ? 1891 3
  • ? 1boy 30
  • ? 1girl 58
  • ? apron 4
  • ? bast shoes 2
  • ? beard 47
  • ? birch 4
  • ? blonde hair 6
  • ? blue dress 2
  • ? boat 2
  • ? clothing 124
  • ? dress 56
  • ? female 23
  • ? fish 6
  • ? flowing hair 2
  • ? folklore 6
  • ? forest 7
  • ? in water 1
  • ? kalevala 7
  • ? lake 4
  • ? landscape 14
  • ? long hair 21
  • ? nude 12
  • ? nudity 10
  • ? older male 6
  • ? on rock 1
  • ? outdoors 39
  • ? outstretched arms 2
  • ? rowing boat 1
  • ? sitting 25
  • ? tree 23
  • ? triptych 1
  • ? tunic 45
  • ? water sprite 1

Meta

  • ? absurdres 64
  • ? non-web source 109
  • ? oil painting (medium) 68

Information

  • ID: 353
  • Uploader: shemeck »
  • Date: 13 days ago
  • Approver: Addison »
  • Size: 5.53 MB .jpg (4000x1930) »
  • Source: file://3783660.jpg
  • Rating: Questionable
  • Views: 49
  • Score: 0
  • Favorites: 0
  • Status: Active

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Resized to 21% of original (view original)
aino and vainamoinen (kansallisgalleria) by akseli_gallen-kallela and finnish
Original Commentary Translated Commentary

Aino-taru, triptyykki

Aino Myth, triptych

In the story depicted in this set of three panels, or triptych, we see the sage Väinämöinen wooing a young maiden named Aino. She does not want to marry the old man but rather drowns herself. The first scene of the story is shown on the left, the second on the right and the final scene – in which Väinämöinen still seeks to capture Aino, who has turned into a water sprite – in the centre. The artist made two versions of this, his first large Kalevala-themed painting. The model for Aino in this work was the artist’s newly-wed wife, Mary. The frame, designed by Gallen-Kallela himself, features quotes from the fourth and fifth poem of the Kalevala that the painting is based on.

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