“Ten years ago in high school, we had an autumn holiday party in my home in Kalajoki. I had asked the guests to leave, and I was about to go to bed, when I took a glance in the mirror. In that moment I suddenly realized, ”Oh fuck, you know you’re transgender, right?”
Aura, 27, Helsinki
Aura, 27, Helsinki
“My body would be much better if I had gotten the right hormones at the very beginning. Then my body would have turned just a little bit in the right direction. But when I was younger, I didn’t know about these things. That needs to be fixed. Trans people should not have to go through puberty without help. "
Iiro, 28, Oulu
Iiro, 28, Oulu
"What kind of example would I like to be for my children? This was something I thought a lot about. Do we have to grit our teeth and endure life, or can we live to the fullest, and be loving, not fearful? "
Elise, 46, Helsinki
Elise, 46, Helsinki
The stories and portraits of Aura, Iiro, Elise and eight other people are on display at the exhibition and as well as on the website:
www.sukupuolenaihminen.fi.
www.sukupuolenaihminen.fi.
“Gender: Human” project in a nutshell:
It’s impossible to know the true number of trans and intersex persons in the world, because cultural constraints, fear and shame keep many closet doors tightly closed. According to estimates, in Europe alone approximately 1.5 million people belong to a gender minority. In Finland about 300 people annually begin the gender reassignment process. (Source: Trasek, 2016.)
The “Gender: Human” project shows, through interviews and photographs, what it is like to be a transgender person in today’s Finland. What does gender mean to these people, how do other people react to them, and how would they like their communities to relate to them?
Between 2015 to 2017, we travelled around Finland interviewing and photographing transgender people of various ages and in different life situations. The photos and interviews are summarized in the exhibition.
We cannot talk with the voice of others, but we can speak on their behalf, so that their voice can be heard more clearly. The project aims to shed light on transgender and promote understanding of gender diversity. We also hope that the pictures and stories will help and support those people pondering their own gender, and their loved ones.
Since 2016 Gender: Human exhibition has been shown across Finland in various cities. Some examples are Third Space Helsinki, Kallio library Helsinki, Gallery Hirvitalo Tampere, Stoa Cultural Center Helsinki, Vaasa library,Porvoo library, Forssa library, Joutsa library, Valkeakoski library, Photography Center PoVa, Seinäjoki.
The project team includes photographer Vesa Tyni, producer Maiju Ristkari and curator Nina Suni.
“Gender: Human” website : www.sukupuolenaihminen.fi
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sukupuolenaihminen
Finland’s laws violate the human rights of transgender people. Read more (in Finnish only): https://www.amnesty.fi/tyomme/teemat/itsemaaraamisoikeus-sukupuoleen/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sukupuolenaihminen
Finland’s laws violate the human rights of transgender people. Read more (in Finnish only): https://www.amnesty.fi/tyomme/teemat/itsemaaraamisoikeus-sukupuoleen/


Third Space, Helsinki 2016

Exhibition in Hirvitalo, Tampere, summer 2017.

The Finnish LGBTIQ rights organization Seta awarded the project in 2017.

Exhibition in Porvoo, 2017.

Stoa, Helsinki 2017.

Texts included in the exhibition.