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THE LOVELIEST GIRL IN THE WORLD –PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT
The Loveliest Girl in the World is a community art project
undertaken by photographer, art and social educator Miina Savolainen
with ten girls from Hyvönen Children's Home. It has taken almost a
decade to complete. The project is based on the idea of “empowerment”
and the belief that everyone has the right to feel unique and special.
The fairytale quality of the photographs reveals a truth often obscured
by the rough and tumble of daily life - the person each young girl
feels she really is inside. It allows the girls to regard themselves as
strong and undamaged people. These photographs are deeply authentic,
revealing the universal desire to be seen as good and valuable.
“Photography can help to show people how they are treasured; how much
they mean to me,” writes Miina Savolainen. “Accepting one's own
portrait is a metaphor for accepting one’s own personality. During
years the photographing has become an intimate and profound way to
interact with the girls. This exceptional long-term relationship can be
seen in the special kind of openness and intimacy of the photographs.
Although the pictures in the series of the Loveliest Girl in the World
are artificial and not from the everyday life they are bound to the
tradition of realistic photography. The documentary quality of the
pictures is multilayered. On one hand the pictures are documents of
growing up, the young girls' personalities and dreams. On the other
hand the pictures make certain features of the girls visible which
cannot be seen in their everyday selves. The childhood of the young who
have grown up in a Children's home includes a lot of feelings of being
abandoned and of being invisible. It also includes the burden of other
people's prejudices, the stigmatisation of being a Children's home
resident. The fairytale-like pictures are juxtaposed with real life
story that seldom had fairytale qualities. The pictures express sadness
but also hope and desire to see oneself in a more gentle way. With the
aid of the non-everyday world of the pictures the young have been
allowed to be seen and to see themselves differently like never before.
The girls do not see the pictures as role-playing. In the everyday life
the girls may also lead “roles” which appear wrong and foreign to the
girls. The pictures may show, for the first time, a side that the young
person holds real and dear to herself, a picture that she wants to
cherish in her mind. The Loveliest Girl in the World -pictures are
extreme documents: they are pictures of a person’s inner identity. This
inner side becomes visible and the deeper emotional “truth” can be
reached by mixing the truth and the fiction. Every human being has an
inviolable right to feel himself or herself special. The pictures are a
proof of conclusiveness of the photograph, which is not only bound to
what’s visible.
The Loveliest Girl in the World doesn't portray the Children's home
residents the way the people living in margins are usually portrayed.
The pictures are also something else from the sexist way of how young
women and girls are exhibited in today's public places. Above all the
fairy-tale feeling of the pictures is metaphorical; it is a longing for
a clean, innocent state of dreaming where you can see yourself as a
whole and an ideal person, protected from the gaze and the expectations
of other people. The series brings up questions on how the present
visual culture makes one a part of the society.
The pictures of the young in the Children's home tell stories of being
a girl and being a human in general. The deepest content of the
pictures, the need to be seen, is familiar to anyone. The attempt to
learn to see oneself in a more gentle way is especially addressing in
our time where people are surrounded by the endless requirements from
different fields of life. The Loveliest Girl in the World exhibitions
have prompted the public to think about the capacity of the photograph
to influence on societal and personal levels. From the point of view of
photography the project also raises questions about the author and
ethics. This project could be seen as community photography. It
includes the models not only in the creation of the photographs but
also in the selection of the exhibited pictures.
The project, its accompanying exhibition and Miina Savolainen has been
awarded the Spotlight of the Year 2003 special prize of the jury, the
Vision of the Year award 2004, Duodecim Finnish Medical Association’s
2005 Cultural Award, the Young Photographer of the Year award 2005 and
the State Award for Children´s Culture 2006. Patricia
Seppälä Foundation, the Finnish Cultural Foundation, Finnfoto
and the City of Helsinki have supported the production.
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