Kouvola Town Hall, Kouvola St. Thomas Church, Oulu Myyrmäki Church, Vantaa Männistö Church, Kuopio Church of the Good Shepherd, Helsinki Vallila Library, Helsinki German Embassy, Helsinki Ad-Dar Centre, Bethlehem Swedish School of Social Science, Helsinki
Juha Ilmari Leiviskä (17 March 1936 – 9 November 2023) was a Finnish architect and designer. He was especially known for his churches and other sacral buildings.[1][2]
Life and career
The son of engineer Toivo Ilmari Leiviskä and teacher Sonja Jämsén-Astala, Leiviskä studied architecture at Helsinki University of Technology, qualifying as an architect in 1963. He established his own office in 1964, while also working as a teaching assistant at Helsinki University of Technology.
Leiviskä also worked with architect Bertel Saarnio, and together they won the architectural competition for the Kouvola Town Hall (1964–68), regarded as one of the most significant public buildings in Finland during the 1960s, brought much critical attention to the young architect.
Leiviskä came to international attention during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s with designs for churches in different parts of Finland, each employing a similar design language. His mature style combines the sensitivity to the dramatics of natural light of German Baroque churches, with compositional principles of Dutch De Stijl architecture of the 1920s, for instance in the way series of parallel, free-standing walls can define space yet deconstruct traditional notions of enclosure.
Leiviskä had a joint architect's office in Helsinki with architect Vilhelm Helander - Vilhelm Helander, Juha Leiviskä arkkitehdit SAFA.
Juha Leiviskä died on 9 November 2023, at the age of 87.[3]
Design
An integral part of the architecture of Leiviskä's churches was the lamps designed by the architect himself. Leiviskä stated that his lighting fixtures are based on the principles developed by the Danish designer Poul Henningsen for his PH-lamps.[4] The lamps have been taken up as part of the lamps sold by the Artek company, also responsible for marketing the lamps designed by Alvar Aalto. Pendant lamps by Leiviskä are also featured in the British Library in London, designed by the English architect Sir Collin St John Wilson, whom Leiviskä knew personally.[5]
Architecture is closer to music than to the visual arts. To qualify as architecture, buildings, together with their internal spaces and their details, must be an organic part of the environment, of its grand drama, of its movement and of its spatial sequences. To me, a building as it stands, "as a piece of architecture" is nothing. Its meaning comes only in counterpoint with its surroundings, with life and with light.
— Juha Leiviskä, Architecture and Urbanism, (April 1995) p. 13[6]
Vallila Library and Daycare Centre, Helsinki, 1991.
Männistö church, Kuopio, 1992.
German Church and Parish Centre, Helsinki, 2001.
Good Shepherd Church, Pakila, Helsinki, 2002.
Ad-Dar Cultural Center, Palestine, 2005.
Sandels Cultural Centre, Helsinki, 2007.
Swedish School of Social Science, Helsinki, 2009.
References
Quantrill, Malcolm (2001). Juha Leiviskä and the Continuity of Finnish Modern Architecture. London: Academy Press. ISBN0-471-48967-0.
Millet, Marietta S. (1996). Light Revealing Architecture. Chicester: Wiley. ISBN978-0471286448.
Connah, Roger (2006). Finland: Modern Architectures in History. London: Reaktion Books. ISBN9781861892508.
Norri, Marja-Riitta & Paatero, Kristiina (eds) (1999). Juha Leiviskä. Helsinki: Museum of Finnish architecture. ISBN952-5195-09-0. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)