Showing posts with label censorship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label censorship. Show all posts

March 11, 2008

GreaseTank on censorship

"When strangers ask me what kind of art I do, I tell them lakes. Always a beautiful lake, I tell them, with an angel with diaphanous, outstretched wings hovering above the water, and golden trout leaping over a rainbow formed by her tears. A young boy stands on the shore, fragile and alone, peering into its watery depths"

"What a lovely scene," they say. "You must show us some day."

"Oh, I'm much too shy."

It’s a lie, of course. What I really do are pictures of men torturing and killing other men.

Often for sexual pleasure."

-Greasetank





This (rather tame) digital art comes from a website called Greasetank. Greasetank was as I remember a large collection of extreme artwork by Greasetank and many different queer artists on themes violence and sexuality. I personally found the artwork both exciting and horrifying. However, I was shocked to found out awhile ago that Greasetank was censored, taken off the internet because a new UK law outlawing websites combining sex and violence, including artwork. I could rant on and on about my view on art censorship, but Ron the creator of Greasetank says it best:


"I don’t know exactly what name to give my art. I just know it’s what I do. It offends some, fascinates others, and turns on quite a few. I believe there's a largely unexplored region in the human psyche, something Jung called "the Shadow," that many of us are reluctant to face. It isn’t pretty, but it must be examined at if we’re to gain control over it. Until we do, it exerts its influence in secret, which can lead to real-life violence of all kinds.

Censorship is an ugly thing.

I can appreciate that my images aren’t for everyone, but I don’t understand why a few would want to deny others the freedom to view them and decide for themselves. Perhaps these self-proclaimed arbiters of good taste in art have their motives, but must they force their tastes on others? None of my images has ever been hauled into court and charged with a crime, but evidently that’s not good enough for these self-anointed censors.

I define censorship as any act that suppresses human growth and creativity. Ironically, these days most of it comes from within. Some things are just too painful to look at, I suppose, so we pretend they don't exist.

Personally, I would recoil in horror were any of the material on my site to take place in real life, but please allow me the freedom to create my art. That’s all I, or any artist asks for, really; the freedom to explore our God-given talents. I accept whatever responsibility is mine, and pray that life deals justly and compassionately with me; but I refuse to decide for others what they can view or read. I'm not superior enough to make that judgment call.

Perhaps my art represents all that is base in the human spirit. I don't know, but I do know one thing—you don't come to the light by suppressing the darkness. Everything must eventually be uncovered and revealed for what it is, and therein lies the real danger of censorship. It stifles our spiritual growth."



Read Greasetank full response HERE


If you dare, the last online gallery of Greasetank's work is HERE




April 5, 2007

NoTube




The internet censors are busy on YouTube these days, promoting the New American Moral Police of Repression.



OK First Slava's MySpace Page was censored, and now YouTube has censored our SUPERM vol 1 Trailer! Another blow from the conversative ownership of Americans who are afraid of everything. It could have been the result of one determined flagger (or flagget), or a whole sterile group of people who feel that our work threatens their fox-news/george_bush/nypd/christian_coalition/post 9-11/wal-mart way of life.






To those people I say:

SHIP YOURSELF TO IRAQ AND DIE FOR YOUR PRECIOUS BUSINESS!!!









post factum clickum:
read about the ugly history of censorship on Wikipedia.
the even uglier history of Myspace censorship
I am not alone,click here to see other YouTuber Censorship protestors