I wish I hadn't clicked on the thumbnail for the photograph.
I have read about Witkin's photographs, but I have avoided looking at them.
Somehow, the photgraph I just looked at doesn't seem to be revealing, but rather exploitave instead.
The overwhelming impression I have, is one of disrespect to the human being that was a person before they became the corpse pictured there.
Maybe the intention is to cause us to question our preconceptions, but all I can think of is the one and only experience I have had when I was in the presence of someone who died. That person was my aged grandmother, who was almost 100 when she died. I happened to be the one there, alone with her when she passed away, after her long, very interesting and happy and fulfilling life.
I and the others who stood vigil with her before her death did so out of love and respect. Those who dealt with her body (the care home staff) after her passing also did so with care and respect and probably love as well.
I cannot see how Witkin's photograph extended similar respect to the person whose corpse he photographed, and I think that is wrong. Even if taking the photograph isn't wrong, IMHO distributing it is.
To reveal sadness and pain and suffering in the living has both artistic and societal benefit. I cannot see any artistic and societal benefit arising from displaying portions of corpses.
Jorge, whether you are banned or not, I am definitely in agreement with you on this one.
Matt