Walter Runeberg


Walter Magnus Runeberg was a Finnish neo-classical sculptor.

Biography

Runeberg was born in Porvoo as the eldest son of Finnish national poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg and his wife, Fredrika Runeberg. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts, Helsinki, and with sculptor Carl Eneas Sjöstrand. From 1858 through 1869 he studied at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen under Herman Wilhelm Bissen, acquiring a clear influence from the neoclassical style of Bissen's master Bertel Thorvaldsen. He married Lina Elfving in 1867. They had six children.
After periods living and working in Rome and Paris, Runeberg produced many of Helsinki's best-known examples of monumental public art. The largest is the Alexander II Monument in Senate Square, a commission awarded jointly to Runeberg and sculptor Johannes Takanen, then completed by Runeberg after Takanen's death in 1885. The pedestal features several allegorical figures. Notably, the figure representing Law is a version of the Suomi-neito, the Finnish maiden, here cloaked in bearskin.
He is buried in the Hietaniemi Cemetery in Helsinki.

Works

Statue of Alexander II

Other notable works