Flow3r+hors3=yEllow / Industra CZ
10.12.2025 -18.2.2026
Flow3r+hors3=yEllow is a new joint exhibition by Aho & Hinkula, where order and chaos, dice, barcodes, and sandwich fillings intertwine. Flow3r+hors3=yEllow is a coded system and its fracture: a balance between control and surrender, order and chaos, language and its disintegration.
Finnish contemporary artist duo Henna Aho & Kaija Hinkula have graduated from the Helsinki Academy of Fine Arts in 2021/2022. As a duo they have exhibited in KCCC (Klaipeda LT, 2023) and Tartu Art Hall (Tartu EE, 2024).They work in the field of expanded painting making sculptural paintings, installations and video performances.
https://industra.space/en/events/2025/12/10/flow3r-hors3-yellow
「A House in Translation」/ Chengdu, China
「A House in Translation」Every Room Speaks Its Own Language 20.9.- 21.10.2025
The 2025 RE-CREATE Residency Art Season, themed “Ten Rooms and One Living Hall: A House in Translation,” explores the intersections of international residency, local culture, and the everyday presence of art. Within over ten “rooms” constructed through art, more than 10 main-unit artists and over 120 domestic and international parallel-unit creators engage with the urban context through their respective cultural languages, embedding their works into Chengdu‘s everyday landscape.The “hall” serves as a shared ground where narratives and dialogues generated throughout the residency converge, forming a fluid artistic living room that reimagines the experience of an art exhibition through the scale and intimacy of domestic space.
Curator: Cai Liyuan
Main Unit Artist:
Ateliê Vivo Collective (Brazil) @atelievivo
Ayako Otabe (Japan) @ayako_otabe
Julian Burkhard (Switzerland) @burkh4rd3r
Kaija Hinkula (Finlan) @kaijahinkula
Rhaissa Bittar(Brazil) @rhaissabittar
Sebastian Mahaluf (Chile) @mahaluf
时天一 Shi Tianyi (China) @tianyishi_
Shon Kim (Korea) @shon.kim
舒楚天 Shu Chutian (China)
Shusuke Nishimatsu (Japan) @nishimatsushusuke
Simon Whetham (Britain) @simonwhetham
With the Rubbles of Old Palaces Collective (Germany& China) @withtherubbles
Parallel Unit Co-curating:
Gabriel Moraes Aquino @gabri.moraes 、nichinichi @nichinichiii 、张益宁Zhang Yining、寻麓书馆Luxe Library、A4 儿童艺术馆A4 Kids Space
Opening: 2025.09.20 17:00
Duration:2025.09.20-10.12
Location: The Luxelakes CPI Island, Tianfu New Area, Chengdu, Sichuan Province
Organization:
A4 Residency Art Center, Luxelakes CPI

M_itä? Biennale of Contemporary Art / Kumma Art Museum FI
20.9. – 11.1.2026
M_itä? Biennale of Contemporary Art 20.9.2025–11.1.2026
At the Kuopio Biennial, nothing is ordinary.
The artworks do not merely appear. They invite you to step inside, to sit, to sense. They construct spaces where the viewer can disappear, encounter and feel. The M_itä? Biennale of Contemporary Art presents the state of the art scene in Eastern Finland at its very best.
The biennial also extends beyond the walls of KUMMA: you’ll find works exhibited at the Old Kuopio Museum, Kuopio Music Centre, Kuopio City Theatre, Lumit, Puijonlaakso and Neulamäki libraries, as well as in urban public spaces.
The artists selected for the 2025 biennale are Jouni Airaksinen, Michal Czinege, Kaija Hinkula, Saara Hyvärinen, Nanna Hänninen, Antti Immonen, Hanna-Kaisa Korolainen, Maija Laurinen, Ulla-Mari Lindström, Aleksi Martikainen, Sanna Nissinen, Simo Ripatti, Piia Rossi, Jonna Suurhasko, Taneli Törmä, Kristiina Uusitalo, Juha Valkeapää, and the groups Anniina Mannila, Panu Ollikainen and Risto Puurunen, as well as Anna Fält, Emma Fält and Andrea Mancianti. The invited artist is Markku “Sika” Puustinen.
WWW Contemporary / Helsinki Design Week
5. – 9.9.2025 / Suomitalo, Helsinki
WWW Contemporary at HDW
This collection includes all the works from WWW Contemporary’s curated exhibition at Helsinki Design Week. The exhibition unfolds across Suomitalo’s 4th floor winebar, the 5th floor Kuurna restaurant pop-up and the adjoining lobby spaces.

Sirkka Biennale
4. – 6.9.2025 / Sirkka, FI
V SIRKKA ARTE BIENNALE 4. — 6.9.2025
Aitta-Studio, 18 Muoniontie, SirkkaSärestöniemi-museo, KaukonenGalleria Raekallio, PöntsöPop-up Pohjoisseinä Utsuvaara, Levi
Artists: Petri Ala-Maunus, Siiri Haarla, Kaija Hinkula, Hanna Kanto, Eemil Karila, Aaron Aryadharma Matheson, Elina Merenmies, Eeva Peura, Harri Puro, Raisa Raekallio, Sirkku Rosi, Kati Ruohomäki, Alina Sinivaara, Camilla Vuorenmaa
Art Experts: Christian Ehrentraut, Senior Director Galerie EIGEN + ART Leipzig/Berlin.
Saara Hacklin, Chief Curator of Collections at the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma.
Sanna Lipponen, Art Critic
Musicians: DJ Hulluella, Juho Kanervo, Pekka Kumpulainen, Tapani RinneDirector / curator: Misha del Val
This autumn, from the 4th to the 7th of September, we celebrate the fifth edition of the Sirkka Arte Biennale, an art event we hold every second year at our place in Sirkka, Kittilä, consisting of a curated art exhibition, a short residency for participating artists, and a sideshow program of live music performances. The theme for the upcoming Sirkka Biennale is ‘The Phenomenon of Painting’, and so for the exhibition we have invited 14 artists whose main practices revolve around the multifaceted mercurial medium of painting. We hope, through the works in the exhibition and the presence of the artists, to enliven a conversation about the pulse, purpose and pitfalls of painting today, to put neck to neck conflicting ideas about what painting might and should be, to kindle some good inspiration to keep us going, and in short, to gain new insights about the old practice. The focus of the art event has from the onset been to create a relaxed, low-key, supported atmosphere harboured by the northern nature for artists to share ideas, stories and artworks.
The works of the Biennale exhibition are spreading over four different locations in Kittilä Municipality: throughout the buildings and yard of our property in Sirkka; Särestöniemi-museo-museo in Kaukonen, where Reidar’s atelier is hosting a conversation between works of contemporary painters and those of our beloved master from Särestö; pop-up space PohjoisseinäUtsuvaara, Levi; and Galleria Raekallio in Pöntsö.
The Biennale runs, in parallel with the art exhibition, an evening program of live performances. This year, we are thrilled to have with us artists Tapani Rinne, Juho Kanervo, @DJ Hulluella, and Rovaniemi-based singer-songwriter Pekka Kumpulainen, who will present his newly musicalised poems by Timo K. Mukka. The Sirkka Biennale is an artistic event designed to bring people together in a supportive environment of creativity, reflection, amusement and rest. The Biennale kicked off in 2017, and since then more than 50 artists from Lapland, Southern Finland as well as international artists have been part of the project. The art event continues to be free, and open to the community.
The event is kindly supported by the Finnish Cultural Foundation, Lapland Fund, and Kittilä Municipality Cultural Services.
Kaija Hinkula on Playful Structures and Utopian Visions / Fciny
29.4.2025 Article about my artistic practice and residency in ISCP by Finnish Cultural Institution in New York
http://Kaija Hinkula on Playful Structures and Utopian Visions
The Fine Arts Academy of Finland Prize 2025
I’m thrilled to share that I’ve been awarded the Fine Arts Academy of Finland Foundation Prize, alongside my fellow artists Axel Straschnoy, Johanna Lonka ja Bita Razavi.
In 2013, the Fine Arts Academy of Finland launched an art prize called The Fine Arts Academy of Finland Prize. The prize is awarded to an active Finnish visual artist who has not yet received a financially significant art prize and whose work is deemed internationally interesting.
The prize is awarded in collaboration with EMMA (Espoo Museum of Modern Art) and the City of Espoo.
“All the awarded artists create spatial works that incorporate a variety of artistic methods. However, each artist’s approach and expression are distinct. Axel Straschnoy explores scientific phenomena and human-developed theories, transforming them into artistic experiences. Bita Razavi assumes the role of an observer, examining human actions, desires, and speech, as well as the emotions, contradictions, and resolutions they generate. Johanna Lonka delves into the ways different species adapt to and can adapt to a changing environment and a disappearing natural world – at times reversing the relationships between species. Kaija Hinkula, in turn, works playfully within the expanded field of painting, encouraging viewers to engage their imagination,
dream, and envision a better future. The prize winners are in an excellent creative phase, and their work is topical as well as internationally relevant.”
Read more ( in Finnish) :
Essay about my practice by Tarja Pitkänen-Walter:
Painting as a Scene that Shapes the World
— on Kaija Hinkula’s Art
Text: Tarja Pitkänen-Walter 2/2025
Fine Arts Academy of Finland Foundation Prize
“I think of the Gardener installation as a metaphor for nurturing and feeding dreams. References to the gardener’s chores, such as caring for imaginary plants and seeds, are a metaphor for the human capacity for imagining a new world. The potential of seedlings and bright fantastical colors symbolize the processes of growing and change, creating a new world and ideas.” (Kaija Hinkula on her exhibition Gardener in 2024)
Understanding the great forces of dreaming and imagination are central to Kaija Hinkula’s artistic process. Rather than escapism, she is concerned with awareness of the mutability of reality and challenging this. The artist’s studio and work are a safe haven and a growing place for freedom, living differently, and new points of view. It is especially comforting now that the world is rather topsy-turvy. Hinkula’s fresh gifts to the world take shape there.
Her works are based on the central elements of painting: colour and composition. However, they are not limited to a traditional, flat format. Of course, the works mostly consist of painted or otherwise coloured surfaces, but also of three-dimensional shapes and ready-made objects. The colours especially lead the exhibition space to merge with the works. Some of Hinkula’s works involve moving images, light, and even performance. The use of light and moving images creates a fresh interpretation of painting as a medium. She talks about crossing the borders of painting and fusing different art forms in moving processes.
Hinkula’s works raise questions and make statements on the expanded potential of painting. First of all, why should a painting be limited to the wall? Hinkula’s Master of Fine Arts thesis project in 2021 did not look like a painting torn down from a wall but rather like the wall was bent and blended with the painting. The painting’s elements also escaped their habitual places in her earlier works in the Builder exhibition of 2019. A yellow rectangle ran down the wall and half onto the floor at a sharp angle and aniline spray paint staggered up to the ceiling and turned into a vaporous line. An upside-down box with something resembling a trickle of red paint hanging out of it was placed on the room divider. It was as if Hinkula had turned the rectangular canvas upside down and allowed the contents to run and trickle into the space. She was shaking the abstract geometric minimalism of the modernist tradition into a new shape, an unrestrained and free independence, towards a ‘fantastical minimalism’ as she herself defines her current work.
The names of Hinkula’s exhibitions evoke painting as a verb, an action:
Builder (2019), Play (2022), Stargazer (2023), and Gardener (2024). An important pointer is also Democracy (2024), a public installation for the Oulu City Hall. In the site-specific painting installation in the lobby of the city council, the central elements of decision-making, the Finnish words JAA and EI, as well as the president’s mallet, are interpreted in two- and three-dimensional assemblages of colours, forms, spatial compositions, and textures. The viewer recognises the multi-sensory representation of the elements of power, absolute in themselves, as human and humoristic, and their weight seems fickle. The ‘aesthetic activism’ of the installation freshens up the public image of the city hall.
In Hinkula’s work shifting places, observations, or materials out of context and changing them into new shapes, spaces, or actions is central. For example, in her video performance Baking for my Lover (2023) the colourful stress balls turn into swelling and bubbling dough in the artist’s more or less gentle hands, commenting on the nature of the relationship. Meanwhile, the nature of painting is freed from the expectation of a fixed object and the requirement of paint applied with a brush. It wears different materials, merges with day to day life, societal institutions and colours, and changes their nature as well as that of the art. In taking a step forward and into the future, by redefining painting, Hinkula’s works are also related to the functions of painting from hundreds and thousands of years ago, breaking the restrictions of the canvas, and to the everyday decorative painting of walls — the need to uplift and entertain, to make the power of visual pleasure a part of environment and life.
Kaija Hinkula studied art at the Liminka Art School and the South Karelia University of Applied Sciences. She graduated as a Master of Fine Arts from the Academy of Fine Arts in Helsinki in 2021.
In her earlier work, the painterly gestures often turned and twisted the basic geometric forms and searched for their place in the space. In recent years, they have blossomed into a rich and distinctive flower. In her exhibitions Stargazer and Gardener, the layering of paint typical to traditional painting is reconstructed as concrete boards with holes in them, through which different things peer, hang, pour, drop, and even claw. These wild yet upright paintings step out of their frames and open up as the colour on the wall behind them and onto the floor as assemblages of objects; a scene. The paintings become cheerful situations and temptingly straightforward agents that call the viewer to join them: Play with me!
Usually, as we grow up, we lose play and the spontaneous interpretation and understanding of reality. Kaija Hinkula’s playfulness enlivens the viewer.
This is painting as a practical site for shaping reality par excellence!
ISCP / New York, US
Currently working at International Studio & Curatorial Program in Brooklyn, New York, USA ( JAN-JUN )
supported by Saastamoinen Foundation & Helsinki Art Academy
GARDENER / mini cabinet / Oulu Art Museum
2025-2026 / ongoing /
I had the pleasure of creating a mini version of my ‘Gardener / Puutarhuri’ exhibition for the Oulu Art Museum’s mini art display cabinets, designed for children in daycare. Miniature art cabinets are artworks designed for daycare centers and services for the elderly, which can be borrowed from the Oulu Art Museum. They are unique commissioned works by artists connected to the museum’s area of responsibility.
“Kaija Hinkula’s Puutarhuri (Gardener) miniature art cabinet is a kind of tribute to daydreaming, observation, and its simplification – as well as to the care of houseplants. The miniature art cabinet introduces the viewer to the dimensions of non-representational art in an engaging and interactive way.
The artwork consists of sculptural painted pieces, which are combined with objects used in plant care, such as watering balls, watering spikes, or a piece of garden hose. Also included is a video artwork, which can be viewed via a QR code on the daycare center’s media devices.”
Read more on Oulu Art Museum`s site ( in Finnish ) :
https://ouluntaidemuseo.fi/palvelu/puutarhuri









