BrianShaw
Member
It’s nothing new. The kids in the classroom started that a long, long time ago.
I'm gobsmacked. I can't believe people here would undress their 10-year-old daughters naked in the woods to take pictures that they would then publish publicly.
I'm gobsmacked. I can't believe people here would undress their 10-year-old daughters naked in the woods to take pictures that they would then publish publicly.
I'm gobsmacked. I can't believe people here would undress their 10-year-old daughters naked in the woods to take pictures that they would then publish publicly.
I'm gobsmacked. I can't believe people here would undress their 10-year-old daughters naked in the woods to take pictures that they would then publish publicly.
I have been watching this thread and I too wish to know why it continues. My understanding is these photographs have been around for some time, you can find many of these prints in question on the internet attached to reputable venues. Where was the public outrage? Why now? Right or wrong someone made it news and we live in a time when everybody has a virtual peach crate to stand on and voice their opinion. I respect that right, but to a point where you have said your peace, presented your arguement and we both say we agree to disagree and walk away. The continuation of this thread further divides its members therefore counterproductive to the forum’s purpose and goal. I implore the moderators to end this thread, or give it a time limit before ending it. This thread is not healthy.
The continuation of this thread further divides its members
I have been watching this thread and I too wish to know why it continues. My understanding is these photographs have been around for some time, you can find many of these prints in question on the internet attached to reputable venues. Where was the public outrage? Why now? Right or wrong someone made it news and we live in a time when everybody has a virtual peach crate to stand on and voice their opinion. I respect that right, but to a point where you have said your peace, presented your arguement and we both say we agree to disagree and walk away. The continuation of this thread further divides its members therefore counterproductive to the forum’s purpose and goal. I implore the moderators to end this thread, or give it a time limit before ending it. This thread is not healthy.
"Not wanting to take part in a conversation doesn't justify attempting to silence it."
Thank you Don. You beat the time I figured I would get personally attacked.
You beat the time I figured I would get personally attacked.
The question I would pose is who of the triality is actually correct.
I'm still gobsmacked with people's posts. It doesn't matter that her buttocks are only 1/2 " in the photo or that she is 5 or 6 or that many consider it art or that the parents and the child and her now as an adult think it was wonderful. Stripping a young minor naked for a picture of this type is child abuse and probably pornography. They may have gotten away with it 60 years ago but they wouldn't today.
Alan, your posts haven’t reallly been about Sally Mann, Wynn Bullock, or photography lately. It’s quite likely that everyone understands your personal ethics now. You’re entitled to that, and entitled to being respected. But continual restatement doesn’t really help the conversation as it reads more like emotional reaction rather than a discussion of the photographs. Just a differing perspective for you to consider, offered man-to-man.
Brian, This thread is about how photographs can hurt children when they're used improperly as models and how penal statutes are enforced. It has nothing to do with ethics per se, but common sense and doing the right thing. I am a father and I would never have made my daughter strip naked to take photographs of her for publication. If anyone here does that, would they admit it right now, here? I doubt anyone will. All this argument for art and other justifications are just bravado and argument for argument's sake.
Also, we are talking about modern times with new rules, standards, understandings, and penal statutes. If someone applies the standards of the past today, they could wind up in jail for a long time. I've posted many parts of the Texas and Federal statutes many times to show the legal issues, not the ethical issues. These statutes were not around 60 years ago with Bullock.
Sorry, but that’s not what it’s about. That’s what you made it about by inserting, repeatedly, your values, ethics, and opinions, as well as throwing around some terms not in the law you cite. But carry on…
I have no doubt that Alan is expressing an honestly held belief about the propriety of what Wynn Bullock did and the role of nudity in society ~74 years ago.
Many people - not just photographers - have a different outlook on that issue.
From 20 years later, a Canadian National Press award winner published on the 1st page (IIRC) of the Vancouver Sun - one of Vancouver's two daily newspapers, and the most serious (and stodgy?) one at that:
View attachment 388562
Sun Photographer Glenn Baglo took this on assignment for a story about Wreck Beach that ran in the Sun. Both the photo and the story were controversial - and at least the photo won awards.
Like Wynn Bullock in the 50s, and Sally Mann later, Glenn Baglo included nudity to support his work. And it was neither dangerous nor harmful nor risky to o so - to children or others.
When I looked for this photo on the internet, I was sad to learn that Glenn Baglo passed away in 2024. He was a talented photo-journalist, and a generous and friendly person in life. I worked with him when I worked as a darkroom technician at the Sun in the 1970s.
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