A ban on cartoon nipples is just the tip of our censorship problem. – Stuff

Supplied

Oliver Cain saw his online social media presence scrubbed because of an image depicting a shirtless man.

Virginia Fallon is a Stuff senior writer and columnist.

OPINION: I have to admit that when I saw first saw male nipples had been cancelled I thought it was funny.

Not really funny-funny but a sort of other-funny, an amusement that used to be rooted in anger long before it morphed into cynicism. Nonetheless, I laughed a little at the recent headline.

Womens nipples have been cancelled for ages, so its only fair male mammilla should follow suit. Theres not much difference between the little raised regions of tissue after all, and if one bare chest should be deemed offensive then equality dictates that so should all of them.

Then, dammit, I read the whole story, and it wasnt any sort of funny at all. Now Im just back to being angry.

READ MORE:* Instagram reinstates queer Auckland artist's page after 'homophobic' complaints* Artist's social media shut down after 'homophobic' complaints about cartoon nipples* Timaru painter's realist 'painterly' feel exhibition

Supplied

The social media ban was a nightmare for Cain, who lost access to clients and contacts across the globe.

Auckland artist Oliver Cains social media was recently shut down following homophobic complaints about one of his works: a stylised painting of the chest of a man with blue skin and bright pink nipples.

The work was intended for an exhibition as part of Aucklands Pride festival, though when Omicron saw many of the events cancelled, Cain went ahead with his own show, paying for a few sponsored Instagram posts to advertise it.

Because the exhibition had a light homoerotic theme, Cain chose what he thought was the safest painting to feature online because I know how some people can be. They were, and his account was blocked because hed been posting offensive content.

Compare that to all the other shirtless people on Facebook and Instagram, and it doesn't really make sense, he said.

His first appeal to reinstate his account was denied and a subsequent one ignored, though after Stuff ran a story hes back up and running.

Karoline Tuckey/Stuff

Photographer Mariana Waculicz had her work displayed at an exhibition in Levin removed due to complaints from the public due to the model's nipples being visible. Shes pictured here with another of her pieces.

Until I read about Cains experience I foolishly thought the only inoffensive nipples were those belonging to men. Now I realise theres a caveat: they have to belong to straight men.

Womens nipples are objectionable regardless of the sexual orientation of their owners, of course. Instagram bans them, and only permitted videos and pictures of breastfeeding in 2014 following pressure from activists. Even in the offline art world, Kiwis have long displayed the same prudish aversion to the tiny little things.

Photographer Mariana Waculicz had a work banned from a 2017 exhibition for depicting a topless woman in a river, and that same year The NZ Woman's Weekly refused to run a breast cancer awareness advertisement showing Aucklander Anete Smith topless after a mastectomy.

Smith's reconstructed breasts and nipples were displayed in a gorgeous re-creation of Rubens painting Samson and Delilah, something the magazines editor said could be deemed inappropriate by readers. Instead, they ran an ad featuring a different woman who did not have nipples after her mastectomy.

Its probably unsurprising I have a tale about the time a single nipple nearly got me cancelled.

While pregnant, I posed topless in a bath of milk for an exhibition about new and expectant parents, and the resulting image offended some viewers. The gallery owner demanded the picture be removed, the artist fought back, and the work remained displayed next to one of a newborn snuggled against his fathers naked chest. That was 21 years ago: look how far weve come.

The issue of cancelling nipples in art is about inequality, deep sexism, and perpetuating shame of our bodies. Gender and sexual orientation should have nothing to do with what makes nipples offensive, if indeed they ever are.

By the way, at that long-ago exhibition my young son stood before my photo and studied it silently for a very long time.

Thats a pretty picture, Mum, he said eventually, I like your smile.

More:

A ban on cartoon nipples is just the tip of our censorship problem. - Stuff

Related Posts
This entry was posted in $1$s. Bookmark the permalink.