Tuesday, August 16, 2022
No Result
View All Result
TimesNewsNetworks.com
  • Home
  • World
    • Politics
    • U.S.
    • Opinion
  • Business
  • Energy
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • Food
  • Arts
  • Style
  • Books
  • Real Estate
  • Magazine
  • Travel
  • Video
  • Home
  • World
    • Politics
    • U.S.
    • Opinion
  • Business
  • Energy
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • Food
  • Arts
  • Style
  • Books
  • Real Estate
  • Magazine
  • Travel
  • Video
No Result
View All Result
TimesNewsNetworks.com
No Result
View All Result

Viennese Museums Display ‘Explicit’ Art on OnlyFans – ARTnews.com

October 18, 2021
in Arts
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A

Vienna’s museums are putting their works on view in a place where few world-class institutions have ever shown their art: OnlyFans. On that site, visitors can now see an account set up by the city’s tourism board where suggestive works from Viennese institutions like the Albertina and the Leopold Museum are being posted. 

“The Viennese are very open-minded,” Helena Hartlauer, head of media relations at the Vienna Tourist Board, said of the unusual move. 

OnlyFans is an app where viewers can pay a subscription fee to access exclusive—and often erotic—content from a creator. Now, for $4.99 a month, people can view painted nudes and risqué statues culled from the collections of Vienna’s finest museums, which maintain that these artworks are not necessarily sexual in nature. The city’s tourism board said the move to post artworks on the platform came after repeated censorship on other social media platforms.

Related Articles

In July, the Albertina’s TikTok account was suspended and then blocked for displaying the art of Nobuyoshi Araki, whose photographs often feature sexually explicit images of nude women. Then in September, when the Leopold Museum promoted its 20th anniversary by posting a work by Art Nouveau illustrator Koloman Moser, the campaign was flagged as “potentially pornographic” by Facebook’s algorithms. To avoid any repercussions, the museum switched out that image for a less objectionable work. That warning recalled Faceboook’s deletion of a post by the Natural History Museum of Vienna showing the Venus of Willendorf, an ancient fertility talisman depicting a naked woman with enlarged breasts.

In migrating these offerings to OnlyFans, Hartlauer claimed that Vienna’s museums were enacting more than just a publicity stunt—they were also aiming to “start a conversation” about the necessity of social media and the problems associated with it. According to Hartlauer, while some might argue that these museums could use other pieces to promote themselves, the matter is not quite so simple, given that it is growing harder and harder to tell what will be labeled explicit. “These platforms aren’t transparent at all,” Hartlauer said.

Museums, of course, aren’t alone in this frustrating struggle with social media platforms—artists have also voiced concerns about the guidelines for social media like Instagram. In a recent op-ed for ARTnews, artist Clarity Haynes described repeatedly trying to post nude self-portraits by photographer Laura Aguilar, only to have them deleted each time. “This kind of censorship does not exist in a digital vacuum,” Haynes wrote, describing the deletions as homophobic, racist, fatphobic, and misogynistic.

The Viennese museums’ new OnlyFans recalls another attempt at launching a platform for sexually suggestive art. This past summer, Pornhub started the Classic Nudes guide, an app that allowed users to find images of nudes in the world’s most renowned art institutions. Museums didn’t respond well to that initiative. The Louvre in Paris, the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, and the Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid all threatened to sue Pornhub for its recreations of famous paintings in their holdings, among them Titian’s Venus of Urbino (1538), which is held by the Uffizi.

By contrast, Vienna’s tourism board said it was making no pretensions about the sexuality and nudity of artworks in its collection. “We also wanted to do this to show solidarity with artists who are censored,” Hartlauer said. “If you can’t show your artwork on social media this can really be an obstacle to your communications efforts, and even to your career.”

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendPinShare

Related Posts

Arts

Berlin Biennale Work Featuring Abu Ghraib Images Provokes Controversy – ARTnews.com

August 16, 2022
Arts

National Gallery of Art Shares New Vermeer Info—and More Art News – ARTnews.com

August 16, 2022
Arts

Ryder Ripps Claims Lawsuit Over Bored Ape NFTs Is Silencing Him – ARTnews.com

August 15, 2022
Arts

Marta Palau, Mexican Sculptor of Textile Pieces, Dies at 88 – ARTnews.com

August 15, 2022
Arts

Trove of Gold Rings Uncovered in Prehistoric Grave in Romania – ARTnews.com

August 15, 2022
Arts

Trove of Gold Rings Uncovered in Prehistoric Grave in Romania – ARTnews.com

August 15, 2022
Arts

Best 2022 Electric Pencil Sharpeners for Students – ARTnews.com

August 15, 2022
Arts

Unionized MASS MoCA Workers to Strike Amid Contract Negotiations – ARTnews.com

August 15, 2022
Next Post
Trump sues Jan. 6 committee, National Archives

Trump sues Jan. 6 committee, National Archives

TimesNewsNetworks.com

Times News Networks is an online news portal that aims to provide the latest news about varies aspects from around the world. We promise to share only high quality content from the world's recent happenings . Feel free to get in touch with us!

What’s New Here!

  • First lady tests positive for Covid
  • Bronx murder numbers show criminal justice reforms harmful
  • Over-the-counter hearing aids expected this fall in US

Trending Now

  • First lady tests positive for Covid
  • Bronx murder numbers show criminal justice reforms harmful
  • Over-the-counter hearing aids expected this fall in US
  • Write for Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

Copyright ©️ All Rights Reserved | TimesNewsNetworks.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
    • Politics
    • U.S.
    • Opinion
  • Business
  • Energy
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • Food
  • Arts
  • Style
  • Books
  • Real Estate
  • Magazine
  • Travel
  • Video

Copyright ©️ All Rights Reserved | TimesNewsNetworks.com