• Source: Sirje Helme
  • Sirje Helme (née Sirje Reitel; born January 1, 1949 in Tallinn) is an Estonian art historian and art critic.


    Early life and education


    Sirje Helme was born in Tallinn, the daughter of the sculptor Kalju Reitel (1921–2004) and the makeup artist Silvia Reitel (née Taalmann, later Kromanov; 1926–1990). She graduated from Tallinn School No. 21 in 1967 and from Tartu State University in 1973 as an art historian. In 1995 she defended her master's thesis in art history, and in 2013 her doctoral dissertation Sõjajärgse modernismi ja avangardi probleeme eesti kunstis (Problems of Post-War Modernism and Avant-Garde in Estonian Art).


    Career


    From 1973 to 1975 she was the editor of the Kunst publishing house, from 1975 to 1996 the editor-in-chief of the almanac Kunst, from 1989 to 1990 the editor-in-chief of the Kunst publishing house, and from 1990 to 1992 the director of the Kunst publishing house. From 1993 to 2008 she was a member of the board of the Kunst AS publishing house. From 1992 to 2005 she was the director of the Estonian Center for Contemporary Art, and from 1995 to 1996 the coordinator of the Soros Centers for Contemporary Art network.
    In 2005, Helme started working as the director of the Kumu Art Museum. From 2009 to 2016, she worked as the director general of the Art Museum of Estonia, and she has been a member of the board of the Art Museum of Estonia Foundation since 2016.


    Academic activities


    Helme lectured on modernism and Estonian art after the Second World War from 1989 to 1994 at the Estonian Academy of Music and Theater; in 1997/1998 and since 2003 at the University of Tartu; and from 2000 to 2009 and since 2020 at the Estonian Academy of Arts. During the 2012/2013 academic year, she was a professor of liberal arts at the University of Tartu.
    Her articles on art have been published in journals in Estonia, Latvia, Finland, Germany, Croatia, Poland, Sweden, Italy, Russia, and elsewhere. She has curated exhibitions in Estonia, Lithuania, Finland, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Poland, and Germany.


    Works


    1999: Lühike Eesti kunsti ajalugu (A Brief History of Estonian Art), with Jaak Kangilaski. Tallinn: Kunst
    2000: Viron Taiteen Historia (A History of Estonian Art), Finnish translation, with Jaak Kangilaski. Helsinki: Taifuuni
    2000: Jüri Okas (with Tamara Luuk). Tallinn: Eesti Keele Sihtasutus
    2010: Popkunst Forever. Eesti popkunst 1960. ja 1970.aastate vahetusel (Pop Art Forever. Estonian Pop Art at the Turn of the 1960s and 1970s). Tallinn: Eesti Kunstimuuseum
    2013: "Kujutavas kunstis toimunud muutused: taastamine, kohanemine, uuenemine (1955–69)" (Changes in the Visual Arts: Restoration, Adaptation, Renewal, 1955–1969). In: Eesti kunsti ajalugu. 1940–1991, vol. 6, part 1, pp. 233–365. Tallinn: Eesti Kunstiakadeemia, SA Kultuurileht
    2016: "Paradigmamuutus kümnendivahetusel. Popkunst. Kontseptuaalne ja geomeetriline kunst" (Paradigm Shift at the Turn of the Decade. Pop Art. Conceptual and Geometric Art). In: Eesti kunsti ajalugu. 1940–1991. vol. 6, part 2, pp. 29–76. Tallinn: Eesti Kunstiakadeemia, SA Kultuurileht
    2016: "Realismi mõiste hajumine ja peavool kunstis" (The Dispersion of the Concept of Realism and the Mainstream in Art). In: Eesti kunsti ajalugu. 1940–1991. vol. 6, part 2, pp. 83–180. Tallinn: Eesti Kunstiakadeemia, SA Kultuurileht
    2016: "Kaheksakümnendate lõpuaastad" (The Late Eighties). In: Eesti kunsti ajalugu. 1940–1991. vol. 6, part 2, pp. 181–224. Tallinn: Eesti Kunstiakadeemia, SA Kultuurileht
    2017: 101 Eesti kunstiteost (101 Estonian Works of Art). Tallinn: Varrak
    2017: Jüri Okas, editor and article author. Tallinn: Eesti Kunstimuuseum
    2018: Leonhard Lapin: Tühjus ja ruum (Leonhard Lapin. Void and Space), compilation and article author. Tallinn: Eesti Kunstimuuseum
    2018: Eesti kunsti 100 aastat (100 Years of Estonian Art). Tallinn: Post Factum


    Memberships


    1981: Member of the Estonian Artists' Association
    1992: Member of the International Association of Art Critics (AICA), member of the International Council of Museums (ICOM)
    1993: Member of the Estonian Society of Art Historians and Art Critics
    1999–2003: Member of the Council of APEXchange (Amsterdam), part of the European Cultural Foundation
    1999: Founding member of the Baltic Art Center (Visby, Sweden)
    1999–2003: Member of the Council of the Baltic Art Center (Visby, Sweden)
    2000–: Member of the Museums Board under the Estonian Ministry of Culture
    2005–2016: Member of the Expert Committee of the Latvian Museum of Contemporary Art collection
    2007–2011: Member of the Council of the international foundation Manifesta
    2007: Member of the International Committee for Museums and Collections of Modern Art (CiMAM)
    2008: Founding member of the Latvian Museum of Contemporary Art association
    2008: European Cultural Foundation art expert, jury member
    2008–2011: Member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Tartu
    2010–2021: Member of the National Identity Award Committee of the University of Tartu
    2014: Honorary member of the Estonian Artists' Union


    Awards


    1996: Annual Award of the Estonian Cultural Endowment for Fine and Applied Arts (curating the Estonian section of the exhibition Personaalne aeg 'Personal Time')
    2001: Live and Shine Scholarship
    2004: Order of Merit of the Italian Republic
    2005: Order of the White Star, fourth class
    2008: Kristjan Raud Art Award (successful launch and management of the Kumu Art Museum)
    2008: Order of Orange-Nassau, Netherlands
    2008: Officer of the Order of Leopold, Belgium
    2012: Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters, France
    2013: Order of Merit of the Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    2015: Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Cultural Award
    2023: Commander, 3rd class, Royal Swedish Order of the Polar Star (for services in developing relations between Estonia and Sweden)
    2024: Estonian Lifetime Achievement Award for Culture


    References

Kata Kunci Pencarian: