Two slender young men, dressed in light colored clothes on a deck looking out in the garden, one sitting in a garden chair the other standing and holding a tennis racket under his arm.
Wilho Sjöström, Tennis Players, 1916, oil on canvas. Gösta Serlachius Fine Arts Foundation. Photograph: Hannu Miettinen.

Wilho Sjöström: Tennis Players

HEIKKI HANKAPainted in 1916, Tennis Players is a work painted during Wilho Sjöstöm’s transitional period both from the perspective of his art as well as personal life. The piece is enigmatic, and a good example of how many details the interpretation of an artwork may extend to.

Around the year 1910, Wilho Sjöström threw himself into Neo-Impressionistic colour change which was referred to as era of pure palette.  Late the same year in Kulosaari villa town, a studio designed by Armas Lindgren was completed and Sjöström along with his artist-spouse Tyra Malmström settled there. During the next years, inspired by Neo-Impressionist colour theories, pure palette white house art emerged painted with eloquent brushstrokes.

The pace of the ephemeral moments started to slow down on the brink of the first world war after his trip to England and France. Paragons in the Les Nabis group, classic forms and decorative texture started interest the artist ever more. They were useful indeed, when the artist concentrated more intensively into portrait commissions which eased at times the villa owner’s debt worries.

He also succeeded in competition for monumental works. The altar piece for Pukkila depicting The Sermon on the Mount was completed in 1915, and the next year the fresco in the Art Nouveau style hall of Privatbanken presenting Helsinki landscape silhouette.

Painting on the deck

In summer 1916 Sjöström was occupied by the sketches he made for Privatbanken’s fresco, but alongside them, he created other works. On the deck at the white house emerged paintings in which summer light merged with free painterlines. The flightyness of the brush is tamed at times to parallel brushstrokes and the forms settle down into careful cubist facets.

On the deck he made the portrayals of the Privatbanken’s bank manager Emil Schybergson as well of the tennis players. The bank manager who lived next door, had athletic sons, Lars, Ernst, and Richard. It is natural to look for models among them. During the time of the creation of the painting, Ernst published Finland’s first tennis books, and participated in the tennis tournament at the 1924 Paris Olympic Games.

The stylish restlessness of the characters is well explained with waiting for the rain to stop. 

One historical sports event also is connected to the time of the creation of the painting. From the deck of the white house one could have a visual contact to Kulosaari tennis court where the second national championships were organized in the late July. During the first day of the tournament, it was raining and they could play hardy any matches that day.

The stylish restlessness of the characters is well explained with waiting for the rain to stop. Ernst and his partner C. V. Sandelin participated in the doubles but had no success this time. The painting most likely has a connection to this tennis tournament, but it is not a document of the event. In fact, the features of the characters do not at all match those of Schybergson and Sandelin. 

A sketch for the work which has remained in the possession of the artists family offers an alternative interpretation. According to generic knowledge, the characters in the piece are young lawyers and later cabinet ministers Ernst von Born and Hjalmar Procopé. Their interest in tennis hobby has nos been recorded, but they obviously have given their noble features to the tennis players waiting for fine weather.

Artist life in turning point

The violet toned melancholy of the Tennis Players temps to interpret also the painting as mental representation of the artist himself. The light years of the white house are long gone as the marriage of the artist couple had drifted to the point of decline. Wilho Sjöström had reacquainted himself with his crush from the turn of the century, dentist Vieno Kalima, the daughter of the chaplain in Viitasaari. 

 Without much drama, the artist couple broke up, and Wilho engaged himself into a new marriage. The Studio in Kulosaari was sold, and a new era in artist’s life began. Personal happiness and the future of the independent Finland was shadowed by a troubled time which eventually grew darker in the time of the civil war. 

Bright colours of Kulosaari were changed into dark and brooding landscapes of Viitasaari, which only gradually revived reminding of the artist’s past as a renderer of fleeting moments of colour and light.

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