153:(Adults and children in the whirls of education). "Aleksanteri Ahola and his friends had a theatre of their own in early 1910's in the villa community of Vyritsa in Ingermanland, 60 kilometers to the south of St. Petersburg. It was called Four Pine Theatre because it was situated outdoors. There were one hundred seats on benches in the amphitheatre. In the background on the stage there were carpets hanging with paintings attached to them. Ali Ahola painted them himself and they showed local buildings, forest, clouds, whatever needed." (Kai Kyösti Kaukovalta: Näytelmän taustaa ja reunahuomautuksia. In: Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo: Aikuiset ja lapset kasvatuksen pyörteissä. Hämeenlinna: Elpo ry 1997, p. 5-9, translated into English by K. K. Kaukovalta for mrs. L. Sabovljev, member of Elpo ry, 1999.) "He began his art studies at the Pihkova School of Applied Arts under von der Flitt from 1919-21, and continued at the Vitebsk School of Applied Arts and Crafts from 1921-22, and then at the Odessa School of Applied Arts from 1923-24. (...) His first solo exhibition was in Vitebsk in 1922. (Kimmo Sarje: With Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo in the Early Days of the Soviet Union. In: Siksi, Helsinki: 1/1992, p. 15.) Ahola-Valo studied at the Vitebsk Art and Graphic Studios in Belarus (1921–1922), and at the Odessa Art Institute in Ukraine (1923–1925).
145:"Ahola-Valo has lived through many of the dreams and tragedies of our century: Bloody Sunday in St Petersburg in 1905, the collapse of Czarist Russia and the birth of the Soviet Union, the artistic utopias and avantgardism of the early 20th century, Stalinism, flight from the country,...the dissolution and abolition of the Soviet Union along with the rest of us. Marc Chagall, Sergei Eisenstein, Nadezhda Konstaninovna Krupskaya, Anatoly Lunacharsky, Maxim Gorky and Vladimir Tatlin: all are episodes and encounters in his life story." (Kimmo Sarje: With Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo in the Early Days of the Soviet Union. In: Siksi, 1/1992, p. 11.)
25:
253:
164:, Belarus. Kimmo Sarje: "He left the Soviet Union for Finland in 1933, but his work was hindered by damaging political prejudice. Nevertheless, while in Finland he took part in many exhibitions, and even started his own business, Ahola-Valon taidetuotanto (Ahola-Valo art production)." In 1939–1940 Ahola-Valo was imprisoned for political reasons in the
169:
exhibitions there, and did illustrations for the Sunday edition of
Stockholms Tidningen.(...) Ahola-Valo returned to Finland in 1982... He has works in the Ateneum in Helsinki, in the Belorussian Picture Gallery in Minsk, in the Kiev Art Gallery, in the Pushkin Fine Arts Museum in Moscow, and in Malmö Art Museum." (Kimmo Sarje)
242:
of education). Hämeenlinna: Elpo ry 1997, p. 5-9 (translation into
English by K. K. Kaukovalta for Mrs. L. Sabovljev, member of Elpo ry, 1999). A. Valve: Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo, artist, educational philosopher. In: L & EIF (Life And Education In Finland), Vol. XXVIII, 3/1991, p. 49-53, ISSN 0788-2211.
241:
Kai Kyösti
Kaukovalta: Näytelmän taustaa ja reunahuomautuksia. (About the play and its background, "based on Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo´s interview in September 1996 and the manuscript of the play"). In: Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo: Aikuiset ja lapset kasvatuksen pyörteissä (Adults and children in the whirls
148:
Aleksanteri Ahola, nickname Ali, started to write a
Russian diary as a schoolboy in 1907 (part one), translated into Finnish by himself and first published in 1988 (Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo: Koulupojan päiväkirja. Ensimmäinen kouluvuosi. Hämeenlinna: ELPO ry 1988, ISBN 951-99967-0-2). At the age of 14
168:
in
Finland. He was one of the last surviving cast members of Battleship Potemkin, if not the last. "In 1946 he moved to Sweden to study the history of the Vikings. This study trip was to last over three decades. Ahola-Valo lived both in the suburbs of Stockholm and in southern Sweden. He held many
65:, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Knowledge.
120:
291:
68:
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
150:
286:
306:
215:
257:
301:
238:
Kimmo Sarje: With
Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo in the Early Days of the Soviet Union. In: Siksi (Helsinki), 1/1992, p. 10-15.
76:
89:
Content in this edit is translated from the existing
Finnish Knowledge article at ]; see its history for attribution.
311:
98:
138:
artist, architect and thinker. Inventor of "AE-evohomology" life philosophy. He was a witness to the
37:
296:
84:
219:
165:
131:
105:
281:
276:
8:
157:
139:
188:
80:
270:
160:
silent film. In 1930 he designed "The temple of violence of mankind" in
87:
to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
135:
62:
252:
119:
161:
292:
People from
Viipuri Province (Grand Duchy of Finland)
58:
187:
268:
263:TEA Tagebuch- und Erinnerungsarchiv Berlin e.V.
134:– 15 September 1997, Simrishamn, Sweden) was a
83:accompanying your translation by providing an
49:Click for important translation instructions.
36:expand this article with text translated from
185:
151:Aikuiset ja lapset kasvatuksen pyörteissä
118:
95:{{Translated|fi|Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo}}
189:"Ahola-Valo, Aleksanteri (1900 - 1997)"
269:
18:
13:
287:People from Pitkyarantsky District
16:Finnish artist, writer and thinker
14:
323:
307:20th-century Finnish male artists
245:
251:
23:
208:
179:
93:You may also add the template
1:
302:20th-century Finnish painters
194:National Biography of Finland
172:
218:. Art Museum. Archived from
186:Karjalainen, Tuulia (2003).
156:In 1925 he took part in the
7:
10:
328:
123:Ahola-Valo's self-portrait
57:Machine translation, like
38:the corresponding article
104:For more guidance, see
258:Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo
166:Tammisaari prison camp
128:Aleksanteri Ahola-Valo
124:
312:Finnish male painters
130:(27 January 1900, in
122:
106:Knowledge:Translation
77:copyright attribution
260:at Wikimedia Commons
158:Battleship Potemkin
140:Russian Revolution
132:Impilahti, Karelia
125:
85:interlanguage link
256:Media related to
149:he wrote a play,
117:
116:
50:
46:
319:
255:
232:
231:
229:
227:
212:
206:
205:
203:
201:
191:
183:
96:
90:
63:Google Translate
48:
44:
27:
26:
19:
327:
326:
322:
321:
320:
318:
317:
316:
297:Finnish writers
267:
266:
248:
236:
235:
225:
223:
222:on 5 March 2016
214:
213:
209:
199:
197:
184:
180:
175:
113:
112:
111:
94:
88:
51:
28:
24:
17:
12:
11:
5:
325:
315:
314:
309:
304:
299:
294:
289:
284:
279:
265:
264:
261:
247:
246:External links
244:
234:
233:
216:"Ray of Light"
207:
177:
176:
174:
171:
115:
114:
110:
109:
102:
91:
69:
66:
55:
52:
33:
32:
31:
29:
22:
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
324:
313:
310:
308:
305:
303:
300:
298:
295:
293:
290:
288:
285:
283:
280:
278:
275:
274:
272:
262:
259:
254:
250:
249:
243:
239:
221:
217:
211:
195:
190:
182:
178:
170:
167:
163:
159:
154:
152:
146:
143:
141:
137:
133:
129:
121:
107:
103:
100:
92:
86:
82:
78:
74:
70:
67:
64:
60:
56:
54:
53:
47:
41:
39:
34:You can help
30:
21:
20:
240:
237:
224:. Retrieved
220:the original
210:
198:. Retrieved
196:(in Finnish)
193:
181:
155:
147:
144:
127:
126:
81:edit summary
72:
45:(March 2009)
43:
35:
282:1997 deaths
277:1900 births
226:28 December
200:28 December
271:Categories
173:References
40:in Finnish
99:talk page
75:provide
136:Finnish
97:to the
79:in the
42:.
162:Minsk
59:DeepL
228:2016
202:2016
73:must
71:You
61:or
273::
192:.
142:.
230:.
204:.
108:.
101:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.