Lux Helsinki publishes programme and kicks off a new kind of collaboration with the City of Helsinki: “Taking light art to a whole new level”
Finland’s biggest and most beautiful light art event, Lux Helsinki, will take place in 2025 after Epiphany from 8 to 12 January, focusing once again on the centre of Helsinki. At the same time, a new page will be turned in the history of Finnish light art, as the City of Helsinki begins to acquire light art as a more permanent part of the streetscape.
It may be the darkest time of the year, but Lux Helsinki never fails to light up the Finnish capital. In the days after Epiphany, local residents and visitors alike can marvel at light art throughout the centre of Helsinki. The light installations will be on display from Railway Square to the Kaivopuisto observatory. Individual works can also be found at the Mall of Tripla, Kannelmäki, Tapionpuisto in Espoo, and the Lux In event.
Lux Helsinki will bring light to everyday life and the long weekend from 8 to 12 January, 5pm to 10pm, while the Lux In event will run from 3pm to 10pm. For those who like to wake up early, Lux Morning will also be held on 9 to 10 January, when some of the light installations in the city centre will be illuminated from 7am to 9am.
Juha Rouhikoski, Artistic Director of Lux Helsinki, also has good news for those who have been hoping for years that light art would become a more permanent fixture in the city. Lux Helsinki and the City of Helsinki’s Urban Environment Division are kicking off a new kind of collaboration in which the City of Helsinki will acquire 1 to 2 light art installations each year to be placed in the city for a longer period of time for the enjoyment of local residents and visitors.
“This takes light art to a completely new level in Finland, but also internationally,” Rouhikoski says.
Rouhikoski sees the City of Helsinki’s decision as a sign of the growing appreciation of light art. The collaboration places light art in the same category as sculptures, memorials and other monuments typically seen in public spaces.
Stories from Beyond
The theme of the next Lux Helsinki is Stories from Elsewhere. According to Rouhikoski, the theme manifests itself in the form of storytelling. The art installations convey a message from somewhere else, from elsewhere. The message can be about the future, the past, or even a dream.
“The theme emphasises imagination but also conveys messages about other realities,” Rouhikoski explains.
Rouhikoski encourages the audience to experience the light art at Lux Helsinki whichever way suits them best. For some, this will involve going through all the works, for others, lingering over a few selected installations. For the sake of clarity, the installations are numbered on the Lux map, but there is no specific route for the works.
See you at the square
There will be plenty to see in Helsinki’s iconic squares during Lux Helsinki. The British collective illumaphonium will bring their installation Continuum, consisting of illuminated monoliths, to Railway Square, where the public can walk through the installation as if in a mirror labyrinth. The Wave by the Danish Vertigo collective in turn can be seen in the Senate Square, where the public can walk through the nearly hundred-metre-long light sculpture. Meanwhile, the Kasarmitori square will be the venue for the installation Under Pressure by Slovakian artist Pavol Truben, whose exercising light-headed figures comment on leaving recovery from work stress on the shoulders of the individual.
Finland’s most famous light artist Kari Kola will restore the green to Esplanade Park with his installation Just Green. At the Kaivopuisto observatory, the installation Lines by Pekka Niittyvirta and Timo Aho illustrates how high the sea level could rise between 2100 and 2300. The Kaivopuisto park will also be the venue for Ilkka Paloniemi’s Seismic Pulse, which will fill shine laser lights along the old railway line, which was decommissioned in 1980.
The main partners of Lux Helsinki are Granlund, the Old Market Hall, the Mall of Tripla and Scandic Grand Central Helsinki, and its cooperation partners are the Museum of Architecture and Design, the French Institute of Finland, the Theatre Academy of the University of the Arts Helsinki, Puistokatu 4 and EMMA – Espoo Museum of Modern Art.
Image: illumaphonium – Continuum / Andre Pattenden