News

Prize-winning photographer Maija Tammi looks for new ways to depict sickness in photographic art

Doctoral thesis ”Sick Photography. Representations of Sickness in Art Photography” is examined 12th December.
'Unlimited Number of Cell Divisions' (2014), a work by Maija Tammi, consists of used radiotherapy masks. Photo: Marc Goodwin.

'I am interested in subjects and areas where looking at a photograph approaches its limits. Depicting sickness in art involves ethical questions about what kinds of pictures may or may not be shown. The disgust or revulsion that may be sparked by the pictures raise the question about why some pictures are so difficult to look at. Both questions reveal what we are like an how we would like the world to be', says photographer Maija Tammi (Master of Social Sciences) about the topic of her doctoral research.

Tammi's research indicates that most previous photographic works depicting sickness focus on the experience of being sick. With her own work Tammi searches for new ways of dealing with sickness. Tammi's artistic research gave rise to two separate work ensembles: Leftover (2014) and White Rabbit Fever (2016). 

Leftover consists of photographs depicting used radiotherapy masks, and a piece of sculpture consisting of 170 radiotherapy masks.  'As a whole the work seeks to deal with illness from outside the patient's experience, on a general level, and to guide attention to the statistical prevalence of cancer and its cultural construction', Tammi says.

White Rabbit Fever presents two timelines: a sequence of a decomposing hare and sequences of the endless growth of biologically immortal lines of cancer cells. 'The work deals with the idea of illness and seeks to indicate the vacillating nature of the boundaries between life and death', Tammi explains.

Each of the two works include both a wider exhibition and a book: (Leftover/Removals, Kehrer Verlag, 2014, and White Rabbit Fever, Bromide Books, 2017).

An installation connected with the wider work White Rabbit Fever is at the Galleria Lapinlahti. Photo: Miikka Pirinen.

Examining the definitions of life and death got Tammi to look at areas which gave rise to a portrait, ”One of Them Is a Human #1”, which was awarded in the Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize competition. The work depicts the android Erica developed at Osaka University. 

'In my latest work I have focused on biological immortality, clones, and the definitions of life. Among other things, I have photographed hydras, which are small immortal aquatic animals. In addition I produced the work "One of Them is a Human", which deals with questions of being alive and being human', Tammi says.

Buy the book from the .

More information:

Maija Tammi; maija (ät) maijatammi.com

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Person wearing a patterned knit sweater and grey turtleneck in a science laboratory with metal equipment in the background.
Awards and Recognition, Research & Art Published:

Postdoctoral researcher Bayan Karimi wins 2025 Young Scientist Prize

The prize is the 2025 IUPAP Young Scientist Prize for the Commission on Low Temperature Physics (C5).
Environmental Engineering new flow channel in Otaniemi, with students and teaching staff
Research & Art Published:

Significant funding from Maa- ja vesitekniikan tuki for Olli Varis's research group

The InnoWAT project strengthens education in the water sector
Artistic illustration: Algorithms over a computer chip
Research & Art Published:

Aalto computer scientists in STOC 2025

Two papers from Aalto Department of Computer Science were accepted to the Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC).
A person walks past a colourful mural on a brick wall, illuminated by street lamps and electric lines overhead.
Cooperation, Research & Art, University Published:

New Academy Research Fellows and Academy Projects

A total of 44 Aalto researchers received Academy Research Fellowship and Academy Project funding from the Research Council of Finland – congratulations to all!