By

Published: Monday, 02 September 2024 at 11:47 AM


Read on to discover how a move to the country saved Sibelius from heavy drinking and a life of excess

Sibelius in the city… heavy drinking and overspending

A place in the country… Since marrying in 1892, Jean Sibelius and his wife Aino had flirted frequently with the notion of owning a rural retreat of their own. By 1903, it was for Aino becoming less of an idyllic aspiration and more of an urgent necessity. Her husband ‘Janne’ was hopelessly prone to the attractions of city life in Helsinki, drinking excessively and overspending while Aino looked after their three daughters at home. He was, a friend of the family wrote, behaving like a ‘spoilt overgrown child’, and would ‘go to pieces’ if something wasn’t done soon.

The composer himself was not impervious to the argument that Helsinki life was slowly destroying him creatively. ‘My art demanded a different environment,’ he later reflected. ‘In Helsinki all melody died within me.’ An opportunity to wrest himself away from the Finnish capital suddenly presented itself in July 1903. In that month, Axel Borg, a wealthy bachelor uncle of Sibelius, passed away, leaving his nephew money. Now, it seemed, the dream of rural living might finally be possible. Sibelius was, Aino reported, ‘jumping up and down’ with enthusiasm at the prospect.

A move to the country… and away from excess

From that point on, events moved swiftly. By November, Sibelius had purchased a plot of land near the village of Järvenpää, 25 miles north of Helsinki by the shore of Lake Tuusula. ‘At first I found it quite impossible to think of living there in isolation, because even the road is so far away,’ Aino wrote. But her brother, the painter Eero Järnefelt, was living there already with his family, joining a growing community of artists in the area. Perhaps, Aino reasoned, the move ‘wouldn’t be so difficult after all’.

Sibelius’s friends and associates rallied to set the necessary arrangements in motion. The eminent architect Lars Sonck offered to design the property, and by Christmas foundations for a new villa had been laid. By February of 1904 the building materials were on site, and a team of 13 carpenters stood ready to begin construction. By now Sibelius was fully invested in the project, and willing it towards completion. ‘This home is a necessity for my art, which is why it is so important,’ he wrote.