Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Social Media's Horror of Nakedness

The Judgement of Paris by Peter Paul Rubens (1577/1640)
 
The video "Social Media doesn't want you to see Rubens' Paintings" is a brilliant piece of satirical art.

As regular followers of my blog know, many of my paintings and sculptures have suffered the same fate as Ruben together with countless other artists, past and present. When an item is "flagged" by the "experts" employed to police Social Media sites appeals are invariably fruitless. In terms of nudity, their Community Guidelines are also fruitless in that they call to attention the very things that they seek to hide.

My book Notes on the Nude suffered the same fate with Amazon/KDP. After weeks of technically adjusting page layouts to meet their requirements I received the following message:

During our review process, we found that this content is in violation of our content guidelines. As a result, we cannot offer this book for sale. If we identify additional submissions with similar content that violates our guidelines you may lose access to optional KDP services and/or face account level actions up to and including termination.

The picture below, which shows work in progress on one of my sculptures, is a typical example of social media's horror of nakedness. It has been "flagged" time and time again. Thank goodness for Blogger!

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