not too muchArticles+ 7 - 10 | ¶Censoring our disturbing feelingsPosted on 23 May 08 in
Attracted to art
![]() ![]() The inclusion of photographs of naked adolescents in an exhibition by noted photographer Bill Henson has provoked undue public attention, including from the police--and the Prime Minister, no less.Mr Rudd described the pictures as "revolting", which is stupid when he hadn't seen them in context, but he has a point in saying that "Kids deserve to have the innocence of their childhood protected. . . . For God's sake, let's just allow kids to be kids." Trouble is, not all children are or have been allowed to be "just kids". Perhaps we need art to confront us with this. The gallery has announced that it will remove some pictures and then re-open the exhibition. Bill Henson is one of Australia's leading contemporary artists and is internationally respected. His works are held in every leading art institution in Australia and are included in the collections of a number of the world's most prestigious art museums. The Art Gallery of New South Wales and the National Gallery of Victoria have both recently held a retrospective of 30 years of the artist's work, which has been described as "timeless sculptures made with a camera". The critical thing is that the children photographed are and have been fully protected. This the police will investigate. The children and their families did give permission for them to be photographed. But can children give informed consent to such a thing? The proper response to that question is usually "No". Henson's work explores the edgy alienation peculiar to youth. His images of vulnerable young people reveal a deep, somewhat sad reality. We are compelled to look, yet distressed by what we see. Let's not use censorship to shield us from our disturbing inner feelings. Henson's pictures are not titillating. They're not pornographic. Yet I do find these images, for example (not from the show) to be a little disturbing. And isn't that the point? Well, yes. But Clive Hamilton, formerly of the Australia Institute sees the controversy as the result of a society in which children are being exploited in increasingly eroticised ways and the Internet has changed the context in which artistic images are used. He was interviewed on the ABC's PM yesterday (23 May 08). I've argued that previously when perhaps it was a more innocent age, then artistic representations of children, as is the case with the Bill Henson exhibition, wouldn't have provided difficulty. But in an age where children have been so heavily sexualised by commercial organisations and by the wider culture and where there's so much more alarm about paedophilia then I think the presentation of a 12-year-old girl, for instance, naked to the public, really has quite a different impact and raises new concerns. CommentsPost a comment to 'Censoring our disturbing feelings' |
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