Seeing Silence: The Paintings of Helene Schjerfbeck, published by Yale University Press, offers a warm and captivating introduction to a beloved Finnish artist, Helene Schjerfbeck, who is still something of a hidden gem outside the Nordic countries. The book accompanies the Seeing Silence: The Paintings of Helene Schjerfbeck, on-view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York from December 5, 2025, through April 5, 2026.
The beautifully illustrated volume follows Schjerfbeck’s long and multifaceted career through many of her most significant works, from her early studies and youthful successes to her formative years in Paris and St. Ives, and finally to her later decades back in Finland. Along the way, it highlights her quietly powerful portraits and still lifes that edge toward abstraction, as well as the strikingly intimate self-portraits she created in her final years. With clear, thoughtful writing and vivid images, Seeing Silence sheds light on Schjerfbeck’s distinctive process, her modernist approach, and her unwavering artistic vision. It’s an inspiring companion for anyone curious about her art and a beautiful addition to any design or art lover’s bookshelf.
Long celebrated in Finland and Sweden, Schjerfbeck is relatively unknown to the rest of the world. This book provides fresh insight into her idiosyncratic processes and discusses the series of haunting self-portraits that she painted in her final years, which stand among the twentieth century’s most extraordinary self-examinations. Seeing Silence: The Paintings of Helene Schjerfbeck introduces an extraordinary Nordic artist who realized her own unique vision with passionate determination, despite personal adversity and her homeland’s turbulent political history.