- Kristian Gullichsen
Kristian Gullichsen (born 29th September 1932,
Helsinki ) is a Finnish architect. He is the son ofHarry Gullichsen , managing director of theAhlström company (a wood-processing company) inNoormarkku , Finland, andMaire Gullichsen , artist, art collector, founder of the Free art School in Helsinki (1935) and founding member (with among othersAlvar Aalto ,Aino Aalto and Nils-Gustav Hahl) of the Artek furniture company.Kristian Gullichsen has been a member of the board of governors of the Alvar Aalto Academy and the committee of the Alvar Aalto Symposium. From 1988 to 1993 he held the title of Finnish State Artist Professor.
Kristian Gullichsen has three sons and two daughters, one of the sons is the artist
Alvar Gullichsen . Gullichsen has been married twice; his second wife is architect Kirsi Gullichsen (née Parkkinen) (born 1964).Childhood
The
Gullichsen family home was the world famousVilla Mairea (1938-39) in Noormarkku, designed by Aalto, one of the seminal houses of 20th centurymodernist architecture . Kristian was seven years old when his family moved into the house in August 1939. The family was close friends of the Aalto family, and Aalto was responsible for designing the company factories and communities, as part of the company ideology of enculturation. Kristian played with the Aalto children and did odd jobs in the Aalto architects' office.Early career
Kristian Gullichsen studied architecture at
Helsinki University of Technology , qulaifying as an architect in 1960, after which he returned to the Aalto office to work as an assistant architect, before founding his own office in 1961. From 1965 to 1967 he was also Head of the Exhibitions Office of the Museum of Finnish Architecture, Helsinki. In his early career he did a number of joint works with other architects such as Kirmo Mikkola andJuhani Pallasmaa . Of such projects the most memorable historically was the so-called "Moduli 225" house (1969-1971), an industrially produced prefabricated summer house, built in timber, steel and glass, influenced by Japanese house design, the teachings of his mentor, Finnish architect and professor, Aulis Blomstedt and the minimalist houses ofMies van der Rohe . Seventy of the houses were built, but few remain today because they could not withstand the Finnish climate.Mature career
In 1969 Gullichsen founded a partnership in Helsinki with architects Erkki Kairamo and Timo Vormala, Arkkitehdit KY, which continued until Kairamo's death in 1997. The three partners presented different architectural modernist styles, Gullichsen the monumental, Kairamo the constructivist and Varmola the typological. Since Kairamo's death Gullichsen and Vormala have continued together as Gullichsen Vormala Arkkitehdit.
The work of the office reached international attention in the late 1970s and early 1980s, described by the British journal The
Architectural Review as constituting the "Cool Helsinki School". Gullichsen's mature architecture can be seen as a late-modernist style, combining theminimalist aesthetic of pure modernism with the humanist touches and concern for locality, craftsmanship and materials derived from Aalto.A selection of works by Kristian Gullichsen
*
Kauniainen Parish Centre, Helsinki (1985)
*Pieksämäki Civic Centre (1990)
*Stockmann Department Store Extension, Helsinki (1986)
*Olympos Housing, Myllytie 10,Kaivopuisto , Helsinki (2000)
*University of Lleida Library and Science Centre,Spain (2003).
*Finnish Embassy,Stockholm ,Sweden (2002).
*Gullichsen's own summer cottage in the archipelago, Hiittinen (1994)See also
*
Ahlström — Gullichsen family References
*"7 Approaches. Arkkitehtuurin Nykyhetki - 7 Nakokulmaa. Kristian Gullichsen, Erkki Kairamo, Timo Vormala,
Juha Leiviskä , Kari Jarvinen, Timo Airas, Pekka Helin, Tuomo Siitonen, Kapy Paavilainen,Simo Paavilainen , Mikko Heikkinen", Exhibition Catalogue. Museum of Finnish Architecture, 1990.
*Sebastiano Brandolini, "Kristian Gullichsen, Erikki Kairamo, Timo Vormala: Architecture 1969-2000". Skira, Milan 2000.
*Colin St John Wilson , "Gullichsen, Kairamo, Vormala, 1967-1990". Barcelona, 1990.
*Kristian Gullichsen, "Preface", in Juhani Pallasmaa (ed), "Alvar Aalto, Villa Mairea 1938-39". Alvar Aalto Academy, Helsinki, 1998.
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