Murrayatuptown
Subscriber
I won't label her work with any offensive labels, which just perpetuates the misunderstandings.
I won't call it porn, because it isn't. But it creeps me the hell out. I am uncomfortable looking at such work, regardless of who commissioned such photos, a factor which may affect an appropriateness factor.
That reflects on (parochial?) me. Call that one male opinion in a spectrum of opinions.
My wife and I owned an art gallery and my wife was creeped out by this work in particular also. Credentials or membership in an industry don't make one or two opinions any more valid.
Regardless of how conservative a community is, where controversy arises, calling something what it isn't, is one issue. Is controversy part of the success? I don't know.
It's no surprise exhibiting images that cause some people discomfort then leads to controversy. You can't call it something it isn't. If you don't like it, don't look at it. But not liking it doesn't mean you're ignorant, backward, too SOMEthing. Yelling about it and wanting it removed, maybe that crosses someone else's boundaries.
But embracing the controversial subject to support it being artistic or being freedom of expression is OK, as long as one wants the controversy that comes with it.
Artists who use pentagrams for their 'other' significance always have to defend, and resent the controversy, when people ask them about what they perceive as bad, that the artist says they do not embrace or MEAN.
It's like an 'if you can't take the heat, stay out of the kitchen' cliche.
I personally do not shoot nudes, not my family, or anyone else's. I'm just not comfortable with it. Someone else is, and does so. That's fine. I am almost as uncomfortable with some other innocent genres.
If people show up with torches & pitchforks, what is the cost of winning a local battle? That is the part I do not understand, without calling someone or their work, inaccurate names. I still do not understand. That should be OK as well. I am not judging. Just creeped the hell out & trying to look the other way. Is that not also a valid response to artwork?
I almost forgot. In some art, people see the creation of discomfort as serving a valid purpose, to make people think, or whatever. I don't think that is at all the purpose of Sally Mann's work. I honestly think she sees it as beautiful, and so do her clients. It's not her fault certain venues are assailed by...whoever the offended people are.
Maybe it's another cliche, selling steaks to vegans. If you bring steaks to a vegan community, someone is going to be upset. Who's wrong? The observed or the observer?
I won't call it porn, because it isn't. But it creeps me the hell out. I am uncomfortable looking at such work, regardless of who commissioned such photos, a factor which may affect an appropriateness factor.
That reflects on (parochial?) me. Call that one male opinion in a spectrum of opinions.
My wife and I owned an art gallery and my wife was creeped out by this work in particular also. Credentials or membership in an industry don't make one or two opinions any more valid.
Regardless of how conservative a community is, where controversy arises, calling something what it isn't, is one issue. Is controversy part of the success? I don't know.
It's no surprise exhibiting images that cause some people discomfort then leads to controversy. You can't call it something it isn't. If you don't like it, don't look at it. But not liking it doesn't mean you're ignorant, backward, too SOMEthing. Yelling about it and wanting it removed, maybe that crosses someone else's boundaries.
But embracing the controversial subject to support it being artistic or being freedom of expression is OK, as long as one wants the controversy that comes with it.
Artists who use pentagrams for their 'other' significance always have to defend, and resent the controversy, when people ask them about what they perceive as bad, that the artist says they do not embrace or MEAN.
It's like an 'if you can't take the heat, stay out of the kitchen' cliche.
I personally do not shoot nudes, not my family, or anyone else's. I'm just not comfortable with it. Someone else is, and does so. That's fine. I am almost as uncomfortable with some other innocent genres.
If people show up with torches & pitchforks, what is the cost of winning a local battle? That is the part I do not understand, without calling someone or their work, inaccurate names. I still do not understand. That should be OK as well. I am not judging. Just creeped the hell out & trying to look the other way. Is that not also a valid response to artwork?
I almost forgot. In some art, people see the creation of discomfort as serving a valid purpose, to make people think, or whatever. I don't think that is at all the purpose of Sally Mann's work. I honestly think she sees it as beautiful, and so do her clients. It's not her fault certain venues are assailed by...whoever the offended people are.
Maybe it's another cliche, selling steaks to vegans. If you bring steaks to a vegan community, someone is going to be upset. Who's wrong? The observed or the observer?
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