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Saturday, February 03, 2018


Victorian nymphs painting back on display after censorship row

From the BBC

2 February 2018


A gallery is to put a Victorian painting of naked adolescent girls back on display after a row over censorship. Manchester Art Gallery said it took down Hylas and the Nymphs by JW Waterhouse (pictured above) to "encourage debate" about how such images should be displayed. But critics accused curators of being puritanical and politically correct. The painting will return on Saturday. "It's been clear that many people feel very strongly about the issues raised," Manchester City Council said. The 1896 painting was removed a week ago in an attempt to rethink the "very old-fashioned" way images of women's bodies were exhibited as "either as passive beautiful objects or femmes fatales". Curator Clare Gannaway said: "It's not about saying these things can't exist in a public gallery - it's about saying, maybe we just need to challenge the way these paintings have been read and enable them to speak in a different way." Visitors were invited to write their views about the decision on sticky notes and post them in the vacant space.

But after a backlash, the city council, which runs the gallery, announced that the painting would return to the wall. The gallery's interim director Amanda Wallace said: "We were hoping the experiment would stimulate discussion, and it's fair to say we've had that in spades - and not just from local people but from art-lovers around the world. Throughout the painting's seven day absence, it's been clear that many people feel very strongly about the issues raised, and we now plan to harness this strength of feeling for some further debate on these wider issues." The gallery is now planning a series of public events "to encourage further debate".

Speaking on Thursday, Clare Gannaway denied that the gallery was censoring the picture, but there were strong reactions on social media and in the art world. "Removing art due to political concerns is exactly censorship," wrote Gary Brooks on Twitter. "I think you can spark a debate without removing the painting," said Ben Perkins. Professor Liz Prettejohn, who curated a Waterhouse exhibition at the Royal Academy in London in 2009, told BBC News: "Taking it off display is killing any kind of debate that you might be able to have about it in relation to some of the really interesting issues that it might raise about sexuality and gender relationships. The Victorians are always getting criticised because they're supposed to be prudish. But here it would seem it's us who are taking the roles of what we think of as the very moralistic Victorians." The painting's initial removal was filmed to be made into a new piece of video art for artist Sonia Boyce's exhibition at the gallery in March. Postcards of the painting were also taken out of the gallery shop. The furore came two months after two sisters started a petition asking the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York to remove, or at least reimagine the way it presented, a painting by Balthus of a neighbour's daughter in an erotic pose. The sisters said the Met was "romanticising voyeurism and the objectification of children". The museum refused to remove it, saying it wanted to encourage "the continuing evolution of existing culture through informed discussion and respect for creative expression".

[OK. This almost literally made my blood boil. Despite the denial of censorship that’s exactly what this was. It was because the late Victorian idea of beauty doesn’t gel with the early 21st century’s idea of inclusivity. Maybe that’s true. But, and I can’t stress this too much, so bloody what! It’s ART. It’s ART from another age. Indeed it’s ART from a culture – even if it is our own – that many people would find alien. It’s ART from another world. Most importantly it’s ART. You can’t censor art because you don’t like what it says or it disturbs you. Parts of arts job is to disturb its viewers. When the first examples of modern art began being shown in public they almost (apparently) caused a riot because they were so different from anything that had gone before. People actually fainted in front of some of it because it was so strange. Once you start removing art works that do not pander to the latest cultural fads or beliefs you go down the road of Soviet Realism (which I actually think was often excellent art) where creating any work of art was a political act and artists of all stripes ended up in prison or worse. Or you get mass burnings of all kinds of art in pre-war Germany considered decadent or, even worse, Jewish. I know we seem to be drifting (or being pushed into) a more Puritan age but this kind of thing cannot stand. ART is ART. If you don’t like it then leave it alone. Go do something else and leave actual ART lovers to enjoy things some people simply can’t understand.]

4 comments:

Stephen said...

Isn't it funnny how we've gone from 'deviating' one orthodoxy to perpetuating another in a single generation? Sometimes I think only literature and classical art can keep a fellow sane in days like these..

(Viewing toilets mounted to the wall, or paintings of soup cans, does nothing for me.. ;))

CyberKitten said...

@ Stephen: Things are strange at the moment - very strange. Looking back on the 20 Century everything looks so calm, sedate, boring even..... These days you just don't know what's going to happen, what craze will sweep the world, what will become the new norm or 'obviously' wrong from one day to the next. I think it's becoming impossible to keep up with how you are 'supposed' to think - and GOD help you if you have a different opinion from the herd.....! People really should read more history... That's the problem I think - historical ignorance.

Brian Joseph said...

I had been following this incident as it was unfoldng. I completely agree with you and with what Stephen wrote. These recent trends where folks are censoring art and language for all sorts of reasons is disturbing and is a terrible direction to be going in. These days it is coming from both the left and the right but the left seems to be particularly vocal about it. Of course this is an age old fight between those who want to censor and those who want to protect free expression.

CyberKitten said...

@ Brian: I find the whole thing rather disturbing. It's as if some people simply can't handle the fact that other people might disagree with or hold different opinions from them and the only way they can deal with it is to shut the other people down. Not simply walk away but to stop the other people 'disturbing their calm'. It's incredibly childish in so many ways.