Hilja Raviniemi’s cats

Hilja Raviniemi ~ Puzzle, 1940-luku. Suomen valokuvataiteen museon kokoelma | src valokuvamuseo
Hilja Raviniemi ~ Vapaa luonnostaan (Free by nature), 1960-luku. Suomen valokuvataiteen museo: Sinisen Kosketus
Hilja Raviniemi ~ Kissapyörre (Cat swirl), 1950–1960-luku. Suomen valokuvataiteen museo | src valokuvamuseo on IG
Hilja Raviniemi ~ Two tramps, 1950s. Suomen valokuvataiteen museon kokoelma | src valokuvamuseo
Hilja Raviniemi ~ Two Tramps, 1963-1966. Collection of the Finnish Museum of Fine Arts
Hilja Raviniemi ~ untitled, 1950s. Suomen valokuvataiteen museon kokoelma | src valokuvamuseo

Hilja Raviniemi radiographs

Hilja Raviniemi ~ Untitled (Flowers), 1960s. Collection of the Finnish Museum of Fine Arts | src Valokuvamuseo · IG
Hilja Raviniemi ~ Shell design, 1970. Suomen valokuvataiteen museon kokoelma. | src Fall 2023 exhibition

Hilja Raviniemi (née Nieminen, 1915–1973) dedicated her life to art photography at a time when it was still a niche phenomenon in Finland. The art photography scenes consisted of amateur photographers’ clubs’ regional and international exhibitions.  Letters from international exhibitions addressed to “Mr. Hilja Raviniemi” show that photographers were assumed to be men. Hard work helped “Hili” rise to the top of the male-dominated world of amateur photographers’ clubs. She was the first woman to become chair of the Association of Finnish Camera Clubs, and she was awarded the international honEFIAP title, which was only allowed to be simultaneously carried by a select few photographers in the world.

After her more traditional early work, Raviniemi explored the infinite creative possibilities offered by the darkroom, especially in the 1960s. Her recognizable blue era, which differed from the stark black-and-white art photography of the time, began in the late 1960s. Chemist by profession, Raviniemi was an ingenious artist in the darkroom. In addition to blue-tinted prints, she also created completely abstract photographic artworks using different techniques. Raviniemi’s workplace at the University of Helsinki photography department laboratory also allowed her to make the first artistic radiographic images in Finland. Hundreds of Raviniemi’s radiographic works have been preserved and make up an exceptional ensemble of works in the history of Finnish art photography. In the current exhibition, carefully constructed exhibition prints are accompanied by experimental material that grants us a glimpse of Raviniemi’s curious personality and sense of humor, along with eccentric pictures of cats.   

Hilja’s husband, chemist Eero Raviniemi (1911–1996) was also an accomplished photographer and pioneer of color photography in Finland. After Eero’s death, the Raviniemi family’s photography collection was donated to the Finnish Museum of Photography.

quoted from: Hilja Raviniemi: Sinisen kosketus (A Touch of Blue). Fall 2023 exhibition at the Finnish Museum of Photography (link)

Hilja Raviniemi ~ Untitled (X-ray of flowers), 1960s. © Suomen valokuvataiteen museo | src own scan
Hilja Raviniemi ~ Röntgenkuvattu käärme, 1960-luku, hopeagelatiinivedos | X-rayed snake, 1960s, silver gelatin print
src Suomen valokuvataiteen museo ~ Finnish Museum of Photography.