On the sheeny face of it, the entire beauty pageant industry could be categorized as βbad for women.β
Participantsβ success is determined by how well each woman fits a specific (read: male-centric) idea of whatβs appealing. Even the talent portions rest on skills that prove women to be pretty or servile. You wonβt find many weightlifting competitors on the Miss USA stage, for example.
Ultimately, pageantry offers a look at what βbeautyβ can mean when the word is applied to individuals rather than, say, art. And, too often, that type of beauty β the type associated with attraction β is determined by standards set by elite, white men. (That Donald Trump was the owner of the Miss USA pageant for decades is a smarmy fact that bears repeating.)
In an exhibition that works against these limited standards of beauty, curator RenΓ©e Mussai collected photos taken by a late photographer named Raphael Albert. Albert took candid shots of black beauty pageant competitors in Britain in the β70s and eventually went on to establish the Miss Teenager and Miss West Indies contests in Great Britain. His photos are now on view in London under the title βMiss Black and Beautiful.β
βAlbert established dedicated black pageantry in order to create a distinct space where black women were able to both occupy and own the idea of βbeautyβ for themselves,β Mussai said in an email to The Huffington Post, βwithout the need of conforming to Eurocentric ideals.β
Albertβs photos were taken over a decade before Vanessa Williams became the first black woman to win the Miss America title in 1984. Williamsβ win, while hugely inspiring, came at an emotional cost; racist comments about her win abounded, and she was sent hate mail β the precursor to Twitter trolling β before she eventually resigned.
One would hope that, in the decades since, beauty pageant viewers have begun to see the many forms βbeautyβ can take. But, lamentably, even when the first Indian-American Miss America was crowned in 2013, people on Twitter were fired up with thoughtless hate.
βIt is of course important to see or read [Albertβs] photographs within a 1970s British context, a time and place where black women were largely invisible within mainstream arenas of βbeauty,ββ Mussai said. But, conversations about βblack women, beauty and visibility are still potent 40 years on, in popular culture, the art world and mainstream fashion arenas alike.β
She continued, βThese photographs are as necessary today as they were then, as visual maps and tokens of visibility, and of celebration.β
βMiss Black and Beautifulβ is on view at Autograph ABP in London until Sept. 24, 2016.