Wed Jul 23, 2008 11:04 am
Here's another update on that portraits of children controversy we were discussin a short while ago. Hmm...
The NSW Government will review restrictions governing the representation of children in art, in the wake of several child nude model controversies. NSW Community Services Minister Kevin Greene said he will raise the issue at the Community Services and Disabilities Ministerial Council meeting in Canberra today.
"Recent events in NSW have highlighted how concerned the community is about how children are represented in artworks and publications," Mr Greene said in a statement. "This is clearly a complex issue. No one wants the government to be the arbiter of artistic merit, but where there is a concern that an image of a child has been obtained inappropriately, or is displayed or publicised inappropriately, then some parts of the community want to see measures put in place that protect children."
The announcement comes a week after the Classification Board approved another photograph of a naked child. The board ruled last Wednesday that the July edition of Art Monthly, which featured a naked image of six-year-old Olympia Nelson on the cover, taken by her mother Pollixeni Papapetrou in 2003, deserved an Unrestricted: M rating, which means it is suitable for publication, though discretion is advised for people under the age of 15.
The NSW Attorney General John Hatzistergos said on Friday he would ask the relevent ministers to review the National Classification Scheme. "I will be proposing that the censorship ministers agree to review the operation of the national classification scheme with a view to improving the protection of children," Mr Hatzistergos said.
The Australia Council is also proceeding with plans to develop a protocol for the representation of children in projects they fund, following a request from Prime Minster Kevin Rudd. "We need to make sure the protocols are thoroughly put together, balancing community concerns and artistic freedoms," an Australia Council spokesman said.
But the father of the girl involved in the latest art scandal, Melbourne art critic Robert Nelson, says the classification system is irrelevant to this debate anyway, given that most objections to images of naked children are that it would appeal to paedophiles, not damage young viewers. "Their argument is not about protecting children from seeing the image, it's about protecting children from being seen by adults," he told the Herald.
The furore over the magazine came only a month after police seized works of naked adolescents by renowned photographer Bill Henson, sparking a national debate about art censorship and child pornography. Those images were eventually classified PG and returned to the Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery.
Josephine Tovey July 23, 2008 - 10:22AM
“But I being poor, have only my dreams. I lay them at your feet...Tread softly; for you tread on my dreams.”
― John Keats
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