If they've moved it, how can anyone discuss its content?
Gallery removes naked nymphs painting to 'prompt conversation'
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View Post[...]
Manchester Art Gallery has asked the question after removing John William Waterhouse’s Hylas and the Nymphs, one of the most recognisable of the pre-Raphaelite paintings, from its walls. Postcards of the painting will be removed from sale in the shop.
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Should we be laughing or worried, or give up?
HOST: If you think this should be on The General Art, please move it. And which painting will be the next target?
There is already an incredible amount of art and historical artifacts in the cellars of museums [due to space issues], displacing the art we've been displaying up to now in favor of a message board is not the most brilliant solution.
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Originally posted by Anastasius View PostAh, 2018. The Year of the Puritan Reformation. Must remember to cover those piano legs.
Or was 2018 the year when we finally lost all sense of perspective and common-sense ?
If this censorship continues children will become ashamed of their bodies - rather like a return to Victorian times.Last edited by Stanfordian; 02-02-18, 15:13.
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As I see it the possible reactions to the gallery initiative might be:
Relief that a work designed for the titillation of elderly gents has been unmasked
Rage that female children’s mammary glands are exposed...rather than male chidren’s parts?
Distaste from people with religious objections to public soft porn
Pleasure that people have started talking openly
Etc. Etc.
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Richard Tarleton
The latest programme in Andrew Graham Dixon's Art, Passion and Power programmes about the Royal Collections included a fascinating insight into Queen Victoria - see from about 36 minutes onwards. In 1852 she gave Albert just such a "voyeur" painting - not Pre-R, too early for that, but by Winterhalter, of a bloke spying on a bevy of naked female pulchritude - as AG-D put it, high Victorian soft porn. The painting hangs over the desk in Osborne House where the two of them sat side by side to go through the red boxes. Victoria thought it a beautiful painting of beautiful women, and that it was probably intended, AG-D says, to remind Albert to stay in touxch with his sexy side.
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Richard Tarleton
No indeed, and thank you jean for the prompt - it's been on the shelves for a while, ever since my wife's art and design degree course, and I've only dipped into it, will now read it properly. OT, I had a lively debate (in print) a few years back with colleagues on "landscape" - what it is, how we see it, how no two people see the same thing...I was taking issue with the aesthetes....
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Seems to be working very well indeed
Stimulating discussion amongst all sorts of folk who would never go to a gallery
along with those who are making assumptions about "censorship" etc
It is aslo in preparation for another exhibition by Sonia Boyce
Dame Sonia Boyce OBE is a British Afro-Caribbean artist who lives and works in London. She studied at Stourbridge College, West Midlands. Boyce’s early work addressed issues of race and gender in the media and…
It does seem to have rattled a few cages, which is to be encouraged. Art isn't just something "pretty" to take up wall space.Last edited by MrGongGong; 02-02-18, 13:48.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostWell, why stop there? Let's ban the Beethoven Symphonies with their undue length, unprepared dissonances and, god help us, REVOLUTIONARY rhetoric! Good heavens, the 6th and 9th have more than 4 movements!
As Dugal would say, 'Down with this sort of thing'!
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....just trying to say something witty about certain Eric Gill sculptures on Broadcasting House, couldn't immediately find anything that took my fancy (not a short version anyway)....noticed that Wiki fails to note as they do with most others : Eric Gill Private/Personal Life....just as well probably....bong ching
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post.
... whereas on the other side of the Channel, the French government is currently suing facebook for having censored, by closing down the account of a user who uploaded it, the (very explicit) Courbet 1866 'l'Origine du Monde' currently at the Musée d'Orsay -
VIDÉO - Le réseau social américain comparaissait jeudi devant quatrième chambre civile du tribunal de Paris qui doit trancher le litige l'opposant à un internaute. En 2011, l'enseignant avait vu son compte supprimé au motif qu'il avait publié une reproduction du tableau de Gustave Courbet. Le...
There are times when I really do wish I were French....
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so i'm not sure we should be taking too much inspiration from the way they go about some things (though the cheese is great and IRCAM is to be envied)
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