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Revision as of 12:10, 15 May 2012




Contact

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Veleposlaništvo Republike Finske
Ajdovščina 4/8, SI-1000 Ljubljana
Phone386 (0) 1 300 2120
Pekka Metso, Ambassador





The Embassy of the Republic of Finland in Slovenia was opened in 2004. It is located in the office building in the centre of Ljubljana.

The Embassy of the Republic of Finland in Slovenia serves and represents Finnish society. It provides a range of consular services, disseminates information about Finland in Slovenia and looks for cooperation opportunities. Its tasks also include promotion of Finnish arts and culture.

In 1999 the Memorandum of Understanding on co-operation in the fields of education, science and culture was signed between the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Finland and the four Slovene ministries responsible for the sectors.

Finnish Embassy in Ljubljana, Slovenia, is also responsible for Bosnia and Herzegovina and Finland has a Consulate in Sarajevo headed by a Honorary Consul.


Cultural cooperation

The Embassy of Finland has collaborated in preparation of several cultural events in Slovenia. Actually the most complex were design exhibitions Tapio Wirkkala - a legend of Finnish design in 2005 and Alvar Aalto – Timeless Expressions as an accompanying event of the Biennial of Design (BIO) 2010.

In 2009 Slovene Ethnographic Museum in Ljubljana hosted the Marimekko – Fabrics, Fashion, Architecture exhibition. The exhibition explored the company’s history since 1951, focusing on the work of the talented designers who defined the firm’s identity, tracing its sometimes-turbulent ascent from a local textile print works to an internationally recognized brand.

In 2012 an exhibition of modern Finnish glass art from years 2005–2010 was on view in the National Museum of Slovenia, organised in collaboration with the Finnish Glass Museum in Riihimäkiwas and the Embassy of Finland in Ljubljana.

Stefan Lindfors, who moves between design, architecture, art, sculpture and film directing, participated in the Month of Design 2011 conference. Ilkka Suppanen from the progressive Snowcrash Design Co-operative, presented the Finnish successful design story for the Creative Cities event in Ljubljana organised by the Ljubljana Regional Development Agency.

Literary events are organised regularly as several works by Finnish authors (e.g. Arto Paasilinna or Petri Tamminen, Sofi Oksanen) have been translated into Slovenian. Sofi Oksanen’s Purge was translated into Slovenian in 2011. Finnish writers 
Jyrki Kiiskinen, Sanna Karlström and Leena Krohn ( World Literatures - Fabula Festival 2012) are just a few authors to name who were hosted by Slovene literature festivals.

In 2006 the Embassy together with Cankarjev dom organized a Contemporary Finnish Film Week in Ljubljana. It is the first time that Finnish films were presented to the Slovene public at a larger scale.

Finnish film historian and director Peter van Bagh took part on the 21st Ljubljana International Film Festival (LIFFe) 2010 with his lyrical documentary Helsinki Forever screened as part of the Retro - City Symphonies' programme. During the 22nd LIFFe festival Aki Kaurismäki's latest film Le Havre was screened (it was shown also during the European Film Week in May 2012). The 2011 edition of LIFFe offered also an insight into the classical Finnish cinema, mostly from the 1940s, selected by a group of film buffs and editors with “peculiar cinematic tastes”. Finnish children films Ricky Rapper (in cooperation with the Embassy of Finland) and Moomins and the Comet Chase were screened in Ljubljana Kinodvor Cinema, within the children and youth programme in 2012.

The Animateka International Animated Film Festival in Ljubljana focused on Finnish animation in 2009 and invited Matti Hagelberg as a resident artist to make also a design for the edition of the festival.

In the frame of the Maribor, European Capital of Culture 2012 programme the Finnish-Estonian month was organised in cooperation with the Turku 2011 Foundation, the Embassy of Finland in Ljubljana and the Embassy of Estonia in Budapest. In June 2011 already the Finnish group Puunkuokkijat exhibited a series of wood sculptures in Vetrinjski dvorec, where later Markku Haanpää, an artist-in-residence in Maribor, presented his work that also focused on environmental issues. The Arts Academy in Turku, which is famous for its study programs of circus, dance, theatre and puppetry arts, prepared the opening ceremony Fire Acrobatics Sirkus Sudenkuoppa. The programme of the Cultural Embassy Finland included also a jewelry and fabrics exhibition, comic art, films as well as electronic club music by Jimi Tenor and Esko Routamaa and the Baltic-Hungarian Jazz Quartet concert.

The embassy welcomes also presentations of Finnish artists invited by Slovene cultural operators. In 2011 the Alkatraz Gallery at Metelkova presented Ulla Karttunen's opus, the Maribor Festival's programme included the Finnish Myth Saturday with a violinist Satu Vänskä, while a young Finnish violinist Petteri Ivonen played as a guest soloist with the RTV Slovenia Symphony Orchestra at the Slovene Philharmonics in February 2012.

See also

External links

Gallery