Instagram
ban of Imogen Cunningham nude photos stuns Boston museum
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[April 27, 2017]
By Scott Malone
BOSTON (Reuters) - Social
media company Instagram pulled photos by U.S.
photographer Imogen Cunningham promoting an exhibit at
Boston's Museum of Fine Arts, saying they violated
decency standards, even as parent company Facebook Inc
faces criticism for users' live videos of murder.
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At issue were posts of 1920s black-and-white photos by
Cunningham depicting close-ups of a naked women's torso, which
turn the body into an almost abstract shape, and a 1974 photo of
Cunningham at the age of 91 gazing around a tree trunk at one of
her favorite models, who is shown nude.
"This startled us," Karen Haas, the museum's curator of
photographs, said in a phone interview on Wednesday. "Here is
this artist who has been dead for a long time, who had this
seven-decade career, who fought the fight to have photography
considered as fine art along with her contemporaries so long
ago, and we felt this fight was long since over."
The 140-year-old art museum is one of the largest in the United
States.
Instagram took down two of Cunningham's images: "Triangles,"
depicting a close-up of a woman's breast, and "Sunbath (Alta on
the Beach)." It also removed Judy Dater's 1974 "Imogen and
Twinka."
This comes as social media companies are encountering criticism
after users posted live videos of violence. This week a Thai man
broadcast himself killing his 11-month-old daughter, and earlier
this month a man posted a video of himself murdering an elderly
man in Cleveland. Both videos were posted to Facebook.
Facebook officials did not respond to a request for comment on
Wednesday.
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Instagram's online guidelines say the service does not allow photos
depicting nudity, even if they are "artistic or creative in nature,"
and that it prohibits "some photos of female nipples." The site says
it does allow photos of post-mastectomy scarring and women
breastfeeding, as well as of paintings and sculptures depicting
nudity.
The Boston Globe first reported the controversy.
Cunningham, who lived from 1883 through 1976 and is best work for
her 1920s close-ups of flowers, is regarded as a pioneer in American
photography.
Like other museums, the MFA regards Instagram and other social media
platforms as a way to attract visitors and expand their educational
reach, said spokeswoman Karen Franscona.
(Reporting by Scott Malone; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
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