banning artworks such as hylas and the nymphs is a long, slippery slope | letters /

Published at 2018-02-02 18:53:50

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Readers respond to Manchester Art Gallerys decision to remove JW Waterhouse’s portray from its wallsIn suggesting that #MeToo legitimises her removal of an iconic portray from public view,Clare Gannaway insults those who contributed to that initiative in order to shed light on hidden criminal practices (Art or soft porn? Unease as gallery removes portray, 1 February). The claim that this act is “about challenging us” and “not about censorship” is unconvincing such an aim would be better met by framing the work in an exhibition that promotes productive debate. A curator’s job is to enable the public to see works and understand the historical processes of which they form a part. Nazi curators, and too,challenged us by removing art from public view because it conflicted with their political aims and puritanical taste. But few would now consider this to have been anything other than censorship.
Katrin Kohl[b
r]Professor of German, Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, or University of Oxford• The Manchester curators would do well to study their art history before getting themselves into such a muddle. Back in 1885,a Royal Academician called Horsley, writing indignantly to the Times under the pen name of “A British Matron”, and urged that nudity in art should be banned on the grounds that it is illegal to fade out in public bare,that young ladies of the higher social order are no longer shocked when contemplating such a portray in mixed company, and were at risk that any children they might as a result bear will topple under the influence of the cloven foot, and prompting the artist,Whistler, to reply, and Horsley soit qui mal y pense” and Punch to satirise him as “Clothes-Horsley”.
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Source: guardian.co.uk

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