Invisible Race
The Finnish Museum of Photography, Helsinki
- 19.9.2025–8.3.2026
The exhibition Invisible Race exposes how photography and visual culture have reinforced racist structures – and how they can be challenged.
I feel most colored when I’m thrown against a sharp white background.
- Zora Neal Hurston
Invisible Race is a group exhibition that looks at the role of photography and visual culture in the creation of a racialized understanding of humanity, and the effects that photography has had on upholding racist societies. In recent years, racist political parties and movements have been on the rise in the Nordics, Europe and North America, making racism once again a topic of mainstream social and political discourses.
However, Whiteness is still rarely part of these conversations, even though it is an ideal against which all other races are compared and which we all have internalized. In the Nordic countries, being White has been an implicit part of the national identity. It has shaped the way we look at and understand the world so much that it has become synonymous with our understanding of what it is to be human. Whiteness functions as a way to justify the uneven distribution of power and resources among people. Thus, in order to work towards a more equitable world, it is crucial to make Whiteness visible.
As memory organizations, museums hold a vital role in shaping the ways we understand the societies we inhabit. By collecting and archiving the national photography collection of Finland, the museum continuously creates an image of this country’s history. Some artists in the show have addressed the ways in which Whiteness impacts archives, and how it shows up in the collection of the Finnish Museum of Photography. In the show they approach Whiteness both directly and indirectly, looking at how it manifests in social media, in everyday interactions, notions of nationalism, beauty ideals, and the stories we tell and the ones that we don’t.
Invisible Race shows that the way racism is generally looked at is inherently flawed. In a racist society, there is no outside; We are all affected by the hierarchical relations of power that stem from the notion of race. That is why it is crucial to understand the workings of Whiteness and the havoc it has wreaked upon this world. Photography, video and archives all hold a pivotal role in the normalisation of White supremacy. However, as tools for producing knowledge and memories, they are also vital in its resistance, and in recreation of a decolonised, anti-racial understanding of the world.
Artists in the exhibition:
Tayo Adekunle
Sim Chi Yin
Yujie Zhou
Minna Henriksson
Ima Iduozee
Uwa Iduozee
Nayab Ikram
Arthur Jafa
Kahlil Joseph
Raakel Kuukka
Rene Matić
Zanele Muholi
Karl Ohiri
Elham Rahmati
Lada Suomenrinne
Ana Zibelnik and Jakob Ganslmeier
Museum exhibitions
Museum contact details
The Finnish Museum of Photography
Kaapelitehdas, Kaapeliaukio 3, G-rappu, Helsinki
040 1922 300
Yhteydet julkisilla
Näytä reitti museolle Matkahuollon reittioppaassa
Katso reitti Matkahuollon reittioppaassa
Päämäärä:
The Finnish Museum of Photography, Kaapelitehdas, Kaapeliaukio 3, G-rappu, Helsinki
Lähtöpiste:
Admission fees
12/6/0 €. Museokortilla ilmainen sisäänpääsy.
1.1.2024 alkaen 16/6/0 €
Payment methods
käteinen, kaikki yleisimmät pankki- ja luottokortit, Museokortti, kulttuurisetelit
Opening hours
Mon | Closed |
Tue | 11:00-19:00 |
Wed | 11:00-19:00 |
Thu | 11:00-19:00 |
Fri | 11:00-19:00 |
Sat | 11:00-18:00 |
Sun | 11:00-18:00 |
Free admission on every last Wednesday of the month, 4 to 7 pm.