Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-14 Thread Gonz

El Gringo wrote:
Society decays for any number of reasons.  Poverty is the worst.  I think
perhaps, nudity in society is not a cause but an effect of other problems.
Julius Ceasar said that "Poverty is the mother of all crime."  Poverty
fosters immorality.  Decay stems from poverty not from nudity.  To think
that society will be destroyed because of nudity, is absurd, narrow-minded,
even ignorant.
-el gringo
I have to disagree a little with this generalization gringo.  Poverty by 
itself does not cause these kinds of problems.  I think poverty in the 
midst of wealth may.  Its when you have a mixture of well-to-do and 
not-well-to-do that you have problems.  Both from exploitation and 
greed/resentment.  If you look at societies where you have only poverty, 
you see very little of these kind of problems, especially crime.

Of course this is not always true either.  I have personally visited a 
town in Mexico that I would say is as poor as anything I have ever seen, 
yet the people were very content, despite their lack of comforts/wealth. 
 They were'nt starving or anything, but they had no running water, no 
electricity, no toilets, no phone, no access to medicine/medical care, 
were extremely remote, had no real protection from the elements aside 
from a simple mud hut, yet I have never seen a place where people 
respected each other as much.  There was ABSOLUTELY no crime.  It was 
unthinkable, there was no cultural precedent for this nor did it come up 
in people's minds of how to gain from taking advantage of others.  What 
you had was a neighbor helping neighbor mindset that prevented people 
from falling through the net.  Government was non-existent (thank 
goodness), with very little communication with the outside world.

Its been quite a few years since I've been there, but I had seen 
something similar in another town, and it fell apart when their wealth 
increased due to government intervention, roads, electricity, running 
water, etc.  In that example, all of a sudden a new generation was 
brought up exposed to more wealth and the knowledge of even more wealth 
in the big cities and the cultural resistance to crime slowly decayed.

So its more complicated than just poverty, there are other elements in 
the mix that make people in those circumstances react in 
immoral/unethical ways.

rg



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-14 Thread mike wilson
That's why I spelled it the way I did.
Steve Larson wrote:
Politicians are real "boobs".
Steve Larson
Redondo Beach, California
- Original Message - 
From: "mike wilson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 10:17 AM
Subject: Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series


Sure you're not thinking of polititcians?
Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

But most of them are men.
mike wilson wrote:

More tits in the UK than anywhere else in the world..








Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-14 Thread Steve Larson
Politicians are real "boobs".

Steve Larson
Redondo Beach, California


- Original Message - 
From: "mike wilson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 10:17 AM
Subject: Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series


> Sure you're not thinking of polititcians?
> 
> Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
> 
> > But most of them are men.
> > 
> > mike wilson wrote:
> > 
> >> More tits in the UK than anywhere else in the world..
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> 
> 




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
Hi Stan,
I appreciate your sentiments.  I do appreciate that someone is exploring 
their beliefs (though personally I doubt that, and would suggest exploring 
in other fashions), a... I have to say this to Paul, especially, since I 
don't want him to get the wrong impression (which I suspect he hasn't).

It was thoughtful and appropriate that he post a warning regarding the 
content of his photos.  I was not "offended", as I did not look.  I just 
wish we hadn't broached the subject matter at all.

In reference to distortion of images... I'm not sure to which you're 
referring.

Tom C.


From: Stan Halpin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 23:18:16 -0500

I usually avoid getting into one of these side-bar discussions. But I do 
want to note here that I am very impressed and appreciative that Bob B. and 
Tom C. and others have been able to express their objections without 
screaming, yelling, or accusing anyone of being the devil in disguise. And 
people by and large have responded to their objections without invective, 
distortion, or any of the other verbal spices that so often lead to verbal 
blows on this forum. Antonio, there is a model here you could learn from.

And since I have gotten started... Bob, Tom, one thing you might want to 
reflect on that may make you more comfortable with the image of the last 
supper: a famous painter once misrepresented a scene that is portrayed in 
the Gospels. The image is not the truth. The Word is the truth. And so now 
someone has done a parody of that false image to make a point about their 
own beliefs. Maybe you could celebrate that there is someone who is 
actively exploring and displaying their beliefs rather than rejecting the 
person and their art because it makes you feel uncomfortable.

Stan
On Jul 13, 2004, at 2:47 PM, Bob Blakely wrote:
Thanks! I appreciate hearing your opinion. It differs from mine, but 
you're
entitled to it. Knowing other folks opinions is a Privilege. After all, 
they
don't have to tell you.

Regards,
Bob...
From: "Cotty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

On 13/7/04, Bob Blakely, discombobulated, offered:
"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"
Now, the preceding was a request. It was only a request. It was not a
demand. Again, failure to honor the request will not result in any form
of
discipline. Again, the request may be ignored. In fact you have my
permission to ridicule me for stating it.
Okay Bob:
RIDICULOUS
Here's my request:
I think things work pretty well the way things are, I haven't noticed any
bombardment of sexual images. I think anyone who considers posting images
of a similar nature in the future should not be discouraged.





Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Stan Halpin
I usually avoid getting into one of these side-bar discussions. But I 
do want to note here that I am very impressed and appreciative that Bob 
B. and Tom C. and others have been able to express their objections 
without screaming, yelling, or accusing anyone of being the devil in 
disguise. And people by and large have responded to their objections 
without invective, distortion, or any of the other verbal spices that 
so often lead to verbal blows on this forum. Antonio, there is a model 
here you could learn from.

And since I have gotten started... Bob, Tom, one thing you might want 
to reflect on that may make you more comfortable with the image of the 
last supper: a famous painter once misrepresented a scene that is 
portrayed in the Gospels. The image is not the truth. The Word is the 
truth. And so now someone has done a parody of that false image to make 
a point about their own beliefs. Maybe you could celebrate that there 
is someone who is actively exploring and displaying their beliefs 
rather than rejecting the person and their art because it makes you 
feel uncomfortable.

Stan
On Jul 13, 2004, at 2:47 PM, Bob Blakely wrote:
Thanks! I appreciate hearing your opinion. It differs from mine, but 
you're
entitled to it. Knowing other folks opinions is a Privilege. After 
all, they
don't have to tell you.

Regards,
Bob...
From: "Cotty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

On 13/7/04, Bob Blakely, discombobulated, offered:
"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we 
don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"

Now, the preceding was a request. It was only a request. It was not a
demand. Again, failure to honor the request will not result in any 
form
of
discipline. Again, the request may be ignored. In fact you have my
permission to ridicule me for stating it.
Okay Bob:
RIDICULOUS
Here's my request:
I think things work pretty well the way things are, I haven't noticed 
any
bombardment of sexual images. I think anyone who considers posting 
images
of a similar nature in the future should not be discouraged.




RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tanya Mayer Photography
LOL! I'm sure it doesn't matter, but I'm up there close to record status on
both accounts, I would think!

;-)

tan.

-Original Message-
From: frank theriault [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 14 July 2004 12:52 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)


--- Rob Studdert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 14
Jul 2004 at 12:35, Tanya Mayer Photography
> wrote:
>
> > And that has got to be the most inconcise, and
> long-winded sentence anyone
> > has ever written on the PDML, jeez, I am so full
> of BS...
>
> That was OK, I'm pretty sure I win that competition
> :-)

Which contest is that, Rob?

The "Most Inconcise, Longest-winded Sentence Ever On
PDML" contest, or the "Geez, I'm So Full of Bullshit"
contest?

Or, does it matter?



(sorry, couldn't resist that one...)

cheers,
frank



=
"The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds.  The pessimist
fears it is true."  -J. Robert Oppenheimer

__
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca




RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread frank theriault
--- Rob Studdert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 14
Jul 2004 at 12:35, Tanya Mayer Photography
> wrote:
> 
> > And that has got to be the most inconcise, and
> long-winded sentence anyone
> > has ever written on the PDML, jeez, I am so full
> of BS...
> 
> That was OK, I'm pretty sure I win that competition
> :-)

Which contest is that, Rob?  

The "Most Inconcise, Longest-winded Sentence Ever On
PDML" contest, or the "Geez, I'm So Full of Bullshit"
contest?

Or, does it matter?



(sorry, couldn't resist that one...)

cheers,
frank



=
"The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds.  The pessimist fears it 
is true."  -J. Robert Oppenheimer

__ 
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread frank theriault
--- Tanya Mayer Photography <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote: > 

> 
> PS Frank, did you just wink at me again?!?!

No, dear.

I mean, Yes, dear.

I mean, I don't know.

Well, I really mean, "whatever you think the best
answer is"...

-frank (having a horrid flashback to my days as a
married man) 

=
"The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds.  The pessimist fears it 
is true."  -J. Robert Oppenheimer

__ 
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Rob Studdert
On 14 Jul 2004 at 12:35, Tanya Mayer Photography wrote:

> And that has got to be the most inconcise, and long-winded sentence anyone
> has ever written on the PDML, jeez, I am so full of BS...

That was OK, I'm pretty sure I win that competition :-)


Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tanya Mayer Photography

And just WHERE did I say that Neanderthals were offensive?!?!

I simply said that we like to show off on this list about just how
"educated" we are on a certain subject, and then go and negate it all by
acting like and uneducated, illiterate being (ie. neanderthal)...

And I totally agree with Bill, there are far more things that could be
deemed as offensive, such as people with blatant disregard for other
people's opinions due to them being so self centred that they think that
they are the only one who is RIGHT. ie. "uncouth" or "crude" - which is how
*I* would view somebody who thinks that they are the only ones entitled to
an opinion, or with the correct opinion, on any given subject.

And that has got to be the most inconcise, and long-winded sentence anyone
has ever written on the PDML, jeez, I am so full of BS...

lol.

tan.

PS Frank, did you just wink at me again?!?!

-Original Message-
From: William Robb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 14 July 2004 12:11 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)



- Original Message -
From: "Rob Studdert"
Subject: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the
three shot series)


> On 14 Jul 2004 at 10:40, Tanya Mayer Photography wrote:
>
> > We seem to
> > pride ourselves on showing just how educated we are on such
matters on this
> > list, and then go and negate it all by acting like a bunch of
vulgar
> > neanderthals!
>
> So prey tell, what is offensive about Neanderthals? :-)
>

Not offensive, uncouth.
Far worse in my opinion.

William Robb





Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread William Robb

- Original Message - 
From: "Rob Studdert"
Subject: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the
three shot series)


> On 14 Jul 2004 at 10:40, Tanya Mayer Photography wrote:
>
> > We seem to
> > pride ourselves on showing just how educated we are on such
matters on this
> > list, and then go and negate it all by acting like a bunch of
vulgar
> > neanderthals!
>
> So prey tell, what is offensive about Neanderthals? :-)
>

Not offensive, uncouth.
Far worse in my opinion.

William Robb




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread frank theriault
--- Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >
I think Spencer Tunick's photos are more about scale
> than art. It's a 
> feat of organization to get all those people in one
> place at the same 
> time without their clothes.
> But most of the images seem ordinary to me. I guess
> my favorite is the 
> one that looks like a field of sheep. It's
> metaphorical and has some 
> elementary beauty to it,
> but I find the majority of the work to be dull.
> paul

I saw a TV doc on Tunick once.  I believe he uses (or
at least used) a 6x7 or 67.  

Just thought I'd inject some Pentax content into the
thread 

Don't much like his work, though.  I mean, it's okay,
but it don't turn my crank...

cheers,
frank

=
"The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds.  The pessimist fears it 
is true."  -J. Robert Oppenheimer

__ 
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread ernreed2
Rob said:
> So prey tell, what is offensive about Neanderthals? :-)


Not a single one of them ever used a Pentax. Clearly, they had no taste.

ERN



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Rob Studdert
On 14 Jul 2004 at 10:40, Tanya Mayer Photography wrote:

> We seem to
> pride ourselves on showing just how educated we are on such matters on this
> list, and then go and negate it all by acting like a bunch of vulgar
> neanderthals! 

So prey tell, what is offensive about Neanderthals? :-)


Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread frank theriault
--- Bob W <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi,

> "You mustn't do that, some people might find it
> offensive".
> 
> Well, f_ck them.
> 
> -- 
> Cheers,
>  Bob

Thank you, Bob, for briefly and succinctly putting
things into a language and perspective I can
understand and relate to.



cheers,
frank

=
"The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds.  The pessimist fears it 
is true."  -J. Robert Oppenheimer

__ 
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tanya Mayer Photography

Hohum, I HAD, previous to this, been enjoying this really interesting,
thought provoking, and at times, funny thread.  HOWEVER, can't you people
see that us all having different opinions is just the thing that makes the
world an interesting place to live in?!?  I probably have extremely
different opinions to most of you here, and if I feel like it, I may voice
them from time to time, HOWEVER, I do not judge somebody because their
opinion differs from mine, and I would appreciate the same respect for the
opinions that I have formed myself.  I listen to it, I note it, and I say to
myself "well, good on them for being able to think for themselves instead of
being some kind of pack animal".  If we all thought the same, and agreed on
everything, what a boring world this would be...

I love heated discussions, whether it be on photography, politics, religion,
naked pics (hehe!), WHATEVER, but why does it have to deteriorate it to some
undiginfied, egotistical, mudslinging and insult throwing competition every
time?  Can't we all just agree to disagree and leave it at that? We seem to
pride ourselves on showing just how educated we are on such matters on this
list, and then go and negate it all by acting like a bunch of vulgar
neanderthals! (and I am not referring to anyone in particular here, before
you all go getting offended by that comment!)

I love it when people disagree with me, and I always respect their opinions
and their right to *have* a different opinion from mine.  In many cases,
people offering me their different opinions has opened my mind and taught me
to "think outside the box".  Jeez, think of it this way - there are many
hundreds (maybe thousands?) of religions in this world - most of whom vastly
different  beliefs, if every person in everyone of those religions really
took things to task and wanted to pursue the fact that *they* were they only
ones who could possibly be correct in their beliefs, then we would all be
trying to kill each other!  (We don't need to start a discussion about past
and ongoing religious wars here, it was just an example).  Or to take the
emphasis off religion, if I hate peas, but ERN loves them, does that make
her right and me wrong? Or vice versa? The age old argument about abortion
is a classic one - I personally could never do it, and disagree with it
wholeheartedly, but who am I to say what another person can or cannot
believe or do with their body and what's in it etc? (again, not trying to
start an argument here, it's just an example!)

Lets just have some interesting, thought provoking discussions, whatever the
topic may be, and make it a rule that we won't let our friggin' egos get in
the way and start calling each other childish names, shall we?

tan. *the peace loving hippy chic* (well, my name is "fairygirl" for a
reason, you know! hehe.)

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 14 July 2004 10:12 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)


El gringo, whoever that is, posted:
> Okay, sure, some art is offensive just to be offensive BUT EVEN IN THOSE
> CASES, it is still ART, it is still SELF EXPRESSION, it is still the RIGHT
> OF THE ARTIST to PROVOKE, INSULT, or otherwise offend ANY GROUP HE OR SHE
> CHOOSES...

Thank you for agreeing that some art is offensive just to be offensive.
I did not say that such art is not art and I did not say it is not still
self-
expression.
Of course it is art. Of course it is self-expression. And the artist does
indeed have a right to insult anybody he or she chooses.
Of course, in doing that, such artists are also being rude, and anybody
being
insulted has a perfect right to object to being insulted.

> You cannot argue against it, by arguing against it you are a
> hypocrite, because you wish to have your belief heard over theirs, when
all
> they want is to have their belief heard, not necessarily above any other
> belief.

I believe that people should not be unnecessarily rude to other people. I am
quite aware that many people do not share this belief. Just for the record,
that is simply MY belief and I claim my right to have that belief heard. The
belief that artists may insult anyone else with impunity was already being
heard.

> I think I pointed out what the meaning of the last supper piece
> with naked black woman probably was, without getting to patronizing, but I
> can patronize you if Thats what it takes...

Why bother to try to patronize me? I'm still right, whether you like it or
not:
Apparently as much as you wanted to disagree with what I said, you couldn't.
In
the beginning of your post, you agreed with the point I made, and then you
proceeded SHOUT all sorts of objections to things I did NOT say! Well, I did
borrow your phrase about "missing the point" but really, unle

RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread ernreed2
El gringo, whoever that is, posted:
> Okay, sure, some art is offensive just to be offensive BUT EVEN IN THOSE
> CASES, it is still ART, it is still SELF EXPRESSION, it is still the RIGHT
> OF THE ARTIST to PROVOKE, INSULT, or otherwise offend ANY GROUP HE OR SHE
> CHOOSES... 

Thank you for agreeing that some art is offensive just to be offensive.
I did not say that such art is not art and I did not say it is not still self-
expression. 
Of course it is art. Of course it is self-expression. And the artist does 
indeed have a right to insult anybody he or she chooses.
Of course, in doing that, such artists are also being rude, and anybody being 
insulted has a perfect right to object to being insulted. 

> You cannot argue against it, by arguing against it you are a
> hypocrite, because you wish to have your belief heard over theirs, when all
> they want is to have their belief heard, not necessarily above any other
> belief.  

I believe that people should not be unnecessarily rude to other people. I am 
quite aware that many people do not share this belief. Just for the record, 
that is simply MY belief and I claim my right to have that belief heard. The 
belief that artists may insult anyone else with impunity was already being 
heard.

> I think I pointed out what the meaning of the last supper piece
> with naked black woman probably was, without getting to patronizing, but I
> can patronize you if Thats what it takes... 

Why bother to try to patronize me? I'm still right, whether you like it or not: 
Apparently as much as you wanted to disagree with what I said, you couldn't. In 
the beginning of your post, you agreed with the point I made, and then you 
proceeded SHOUT all sorts of objections to things I did NOT say! Well, I did 
borrow your phrase about "missing the point" but really, unless you know beyond 
any doubt what a particular artist intended a piece to mean, how can you be 
certain who did and who did not miss the point?
Note that I said I knew nothing whatsoever about this particular artist and 
what she intended with this particular piece of work (which I have not examined 
closely). I said I was making a general comment.

The rest of your post can pass without response from me since it has absolutely 
nothing to do with anything I wrote.

> I honestly cannot believe the
> kind of idiocy some of you people subscribe to.  ARE YOU FROM THE MIDDLE
> AGES?>???  Why don't you just start advocating chopping peoples heads off
> for speaking ill of our good lord...  Whomever that is.
> 
> -el gringo
> 
> 
> 
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 3:49 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
> shot series)
> 
> 
> Paul "Steady" Stenquist shared:
> > I don't think the work disparages anyone's God. It simply applies the
> > Last Supper as a metaphor. One can interpret in any number of ways.
> > Perhaps it speaks to the dehumanizing of women as sex objects. Perhaps
> > it speaks to the sacrifice women make in bringing children into the
> > world. Like most art, it is ambiguous. It's a shame that anyone is
> > offended by art, whether it be good art or bad art. I believe that art
> > is usually too vague to take that personally.
> 
> 
> I think that as many artists as there are in the world, we can't generalize
> about all of them successfully. I don't know anything about Renee Cox at
> all,
> so I'm not saying anything about her specifically. But -- Some artists may
> indeed produce something that can be interpreted in any number of ways and
> be
> ambiguous, but some other artists do select their subject matter and their
> presentation deliberately to provoke, or even to insult, people whose values
> they do not share. If the intent of the artist is to cause offence, why then
> should the viewer not take offence? In fact, the viewer who doesn't take
> offence in that case is the person who "missed the point" of the work,
> wouldn't
> you think?
> If an artist didn't set out to cause offence, but is too self-centred to
> notice
> that his or her choice of subject and presentation can offend other people's
> taste or values, again -- why should the viewer not take offence if the work
> is
> offensive, even if the offence was caused by the artist's ignorance rather
> than
> malice? Why, in other words, should an artist be exempt from the
> criticism "this is offensive" just because he (or she) has declared: "This
> is
> my ART"??
> 
> 
> ERN
> 
> 




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Paul Stenquist
Tom C. noted:
Now... the flipside... most people without a moral center (religious 
or otherwise), and I'm not intending to imply anything about any PDML 
member, won't give a damn about infringing on my freedoms, wishes, or 
desires.
And we can be thankful that no one here has infringed on your freedoms, 
wishes, or desires.  No one has asked you to look at anything you find 
offensive, and no one has asked you to discuss any of these issues.  We 
are all free to do as we choose. Thank God for that.
Paul



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Rob Studdert
On 13 Jul 2004 at 11:41, Tom C wrote:

> The problem I see with this whole thing is this...
> 
> 1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
> 2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What is OK
> today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did standards change?
> 3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display of nudity
> put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed today. 4. The basic
> building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family. Man/Woman/Child. 

Societies position of what is moral changes constantly (is cyclic in fact) and 
has since the start of written history (if not before).


Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



Re: OT: Afghan girl (was Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Rob Studdert
On 13 Jul 2004 at 19:42, Bob W wrote:

> It seems to me that unless you have a problem with that type of
> photography in general then it is probably rather inconsistent to
> single out that particular picture.

Well yes I do in fact, I'm totally at odds with it usually, the arguments/self 
justifications presented by most photographers engaging in these types of 
activities are generally poor to say the least.

> I think you're putting a very negative spin on his motives. According
> to what I have read, he returned many times looking for her to try and
> learn what had become of her, partly to satisfy public curiosity,
> partly to satisfy his own, and partly to tell her the story of her
> photograph. Eventually he succeeded.

I'd like to know what the motives really were and who drove/financed them.

> NG and McCurry set up a fund for Afghan girls at the request of the
> woman in question. Here is some information about it:

17 or so years later, and they had to be asked, think about it.

> http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/12/1205_031205_afghanfund.html
> 
> It's probably true that National Geographic and Steve McCurry have made more
> money out of the photograph than the fund has earned, but that is one of the
> dilemmas of having professional journalists telling us about the world.
> Different journalists resolve the dilemma in different ways.

It may be but I've seen the particular National Geographic and Steve McCurry 
"how they found the Afghan girl" production and it's pure exploitation 
regardless of what has since been born out of it. But that's just my opinion of 
course, I don't even like shooting people on the street here without asking 
permission and I know legally it's entirely unnecessary.


Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tanya Mayer Photography

lol, good point Jens!

tan.

-Original Message-
From: Jens Bladt [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 14 July 2004 3:14 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)


It's interesting that the last supper apparently always takes place at only
three sides of the table - too make life easier for painters and
photographers :-)

Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-Oprindelig meddelelse-
Fra: Amita Guha [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 12. juli 2004 23:58
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)


Hey Paul, interesting shots. By the way, have you ever seen "Yo Mama's
Last Supper" by Renee Cox? It was the life-sized photograph that was
displayed at the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 2001. It caused quite a flap
because it depicted the Last Supper, with Jesus portrayed as a naked
woman. I went to see it at the museum and I found it quite powerful. I'm
having trouble finding a decent-sized image of it online but here is a
small one. (Collin, this obviously isn't for you.)

http://www.nerve.com/Photography/Cox/Shocking/viewimage.asp?num=4

Amita






Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Keith Whaley

Bob W wrote:
Hi,
Tuesday, July 13, 2004, 8:58:42 PM, El wrote:

I'm sorry I implied your statement was ignorant...  Julius Caesar, as the
ruler of possibly the most powerful empire ever in history, by nature of his...

On a point of pedantry, Julius Caesar was never the emperor. Rome became an empire 
under
Augustus.
Yeah, but it was Julius, the old dog, that made Cleopatra preggers!  
keith whaley


Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
That's appreciated Paul... sincerely.
It also means if my son walked up and saw the warning in a post, he could 
conclude I was going to, or already had gone and looked.  Or my wife, the 
same thing... or maybe now my son has the idea to go and look.

I'm probably oversimplifying, and among other things realize I am not an 
island.

Tom C.


From: Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 17:39:44 -0400

I have never seen a sexually explicit image posted by a PDML member either 
on the PUG or elsewhere. The images I posted included nudity, they were not 
sexually explicit. And of course the PUG doesn't even allow nudity. That's 
a good thing, because you don't know what you're going to find when you go 
there. On the other hand, if I post a nude on my own web page and tell 
people here they can look at it if they choose, that's an entirely 
different matter. You can still read the PDML in the library and never 
worry about offending anyone. The images I posted didn't appear on the PDML 
or the PUG.
Paul
On Jul 13, 2004, at 3:53 PM, Jens Bladt wrote:

I second that, Tom.
I would prefer to be able to see PDML stuff on the screen, even if there 
are
children present, at work, the libraries etc., where I don't want do cause
others to feel embarrassed.
Jens Bladt

mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt
-Oprindelig meddelelse-
Fra: Tom C [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 13. juli 2004 21:36
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)
Many of us, and let me presume all of us, filter out all kinds of things 
we
don't want to see or hear.  My satellite TV controller has plenty of 
filters
set up.

This constant filtering from all sources becomes exhausting and tiresome.  
I
personally would prefer that the PDML, and by extension the PUG, does not
become a forum for the display of what some  would consider sexually
explicit images, even if there's a warning/disclaimor.

It's as simple as that.  I know that's probably too much to ask and that
somone will suggest this a public forum that reflects the disparate views 
of
it's constituents.   Which is true.  I still would wish that nudity, 
whether
considered art by some or pornography by others, does not become a topic 
of
this list.


Tom C.


From: Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 15:17:08 -0400
On Jul 13, 2004, at 2:29 PM, Bob Blakely wrote:

"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"

We already have that. No one here is bombarded with sexual images. For 
one,
sex and artful nudity are not the same thing. More importantly, to the 
best
of my knowledge no one on the forum has ever referenced a nude without
indicating that viewer discretion is advised. If you choose of our own 
free
well to view the piece, that certainly doesn't constitute bombardment.
Paul







Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread DagT
Nudity is an issue here, as a result of cultural differences.  I don´t 
think it has much to do with religion at all.

When I was 4 to 6 I lived in Colorado.  I didn´t care to much for 
clothes so when it was warm I usually took them of.  My parents where, 
of course, scared of being arrested.  In Norway, having a christian 
state religion (and in fact in most of the world), this seems crazy.  
Even at my brothers house in a strict muslim part of Indonesia small 
children were running around naked.

As a nude child is considered to be innocent in my culture I could very 
easily have file such a picture in a PAW.  I even did in the PUG, but 
you only saw his back.

Now, is there a rule saying that I should follow some moral standards 
more than others?  Should the photographed person cover their body, 
their breasts, their heads, or should we not make images of human 
beings at all, like some traditions dictate.

For me sitting here it is difficult to know which standard to choose.  
On the internet you have to rely on peoples ability to make their own 
decisions, I cannot make them for them.  When in doubt, I can warn 
them, but that was done in this case, so I can´t understand the 
reactions.

DagT
På 13. jul. 2004 kl. 23.03 skrev Tom C:
I don't think nudity is as much the issue...  I personally think the 
human body is a great work of art, but IMO, most images of nudes are 
not designed with that in mind.

By in large I guess what I'd like to express is that there's a whole 
plethora of images and subject matter that could be discussed that is 
likely offensive to no one.  Surely we can find something within that 
selection, instead of choosing what will offend some.


Tom C.


From: Anders Hultman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Also consider that nude human bodies during all times have been one 
of the major motives for all kinds of art. Sculptures, paintings, 
drawings... and photography. Not everyone agrees that nudity is the 
limit to enforce.
--
anders
-
http://anders.hultman.nu/
med dagens bild och allt!





RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
And you are the POT calling the KETTLE black, El Gringo.


Tom C.


From: "El Gringo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 16:38:20 -0500

Okay, sure, some art is offensive just to be offensive BUT EVEN IN THOSE
CASES, it is still ART, it is still SELF EXPRESSION, it is still the RIGHT
OF THE ARTIST to PROVOKE, INSULT, or otherwise offend ANY GROUP HE OR SHE
CHOOSES...  You cannot argue against it, by arguing against it you are a
hypocrite, because you wish to have your belief heard over theirs, when all
they want is to have their belief heard, not necessarily above any other
belief.  I think I pointed out what the meaning of the last supper piece
with naked black woman probably was, without getting to patronizing, but I
can patronize you if Thats what it takes...  I honestly cannot believe the
kind of idiocy some of you people subscribe to.  ARE YOU FROM THE MIDDLE
AGES?>???  Why don't you just start advocating chopping peoples heads off
for speaking ill of our good lord...  Whomever that is.
-el gringo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 3:49 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)
Paul "Steady" Stenquist shared:
> I don't think the work disparages anyone's God. It simply applies the
> Last Supper as a metaphor. One can interpret in any number of ways.
> Perhaps it speaks to the dehumanizing of women as sex objects. Perhaps
> it speaks to the sacrifice women make in bringing children into the
> world. Like most art, it is ambiguous. It's a shame that anyone is
> offended by art, whether it be good art or bad art. I believe that art
> is usually too vague to take that personally.
I think that as many artists as there are in the world, we can't generalize
about all of them successfully. I don't know anything about Renee Cox at
all,
so I'm not saying anything about her specifically. But -- Some artists may
indeed produce something that can be interpreted in any number of ways and
be
ambiguous, but some other artists do select their subject matter and their
presentation deliberately to provoke, or even to insult, people whose 
values
they do not share. If the intent of the artist is to cause offence, why 
then
should the viewer not take offence? In fact, the viewer who doesn't take
offence in that case is the person who "missed the point" of the work,
wouldn't
you think?
If an artist didn't set out to cause offence, but is too self-centred to
notice
that his or her choice of subject and presentation can offend other 
people's
taste or values, again -- why should the viewer not take offence if the 
work
is
offensive, even if the offence was caused by the artist's ignorance rather
than
malice? Why, in other words, should an artist be exempt from the
criticism "this is offensive" just because he (or she) has declared: "This
is
my ART"??

ERN




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Paul Stenquist
On Jul 13, 2004, at 5:42 PM, Cotty wrote:
Ah, but were they taken with a Pentax?
HAR!

You can bet your sweet booty they were!  Pentax *ist D all the way with 
the venerable SMC Pentax 50/1.4 mounted. No Canons in my closet 
HAR!



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Bob W
Hi,

[...]
> If the intent of the artist is to cause offence, why then
> should the viewer not take offence? In fact, the viewer who doesn't take
> offence in that case is the person who "missed the point" of the work, wouldn't
> you think?

I wouldn't, no. Any artist could try to offend me, and perhaps fail. That
does not mean that I've missed the point. It just means I live in early
21st century London and have seen several generations of attempts to
'epater le bourgeoisie'. Eventually it becomes tiresome.

> malice? Why, in other words, should an artist be exempt from the
> criticism "this is offensive" just because he (or she) has declared: "This is
> my ART"??

Perhaps we can turn this round, and ask why so many people seem to
spend so much time being 'offended' by so many things. There seems to
be a widespread belief around that everybody should be immune from
'offense' and protected from things they don't like.

"You mustn't do that, some people might find it offensive".

Well, f_ck them.

-- 
Cheers,
 Bob



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Anders Hultman
Tom C:
2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.
I don't agree. Morals have changed, for certain, but I'd say that 
most of these changes have been for the better. My assessment is that 
people on average are more happy now than a hundred years ago, and 
that is partly due to more liberal morals.

4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks
down, families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay
we see today in society as a whole.
I don't agree with this either. Despite the big changes in what is 
considered acceptable behaviour etc, people still form families. Of 
course they do. I don't think there is any imminent threat to society 
or the family as a concept. And I don't think that people gradually 
will behave less ethical either.

How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual images on the whole do
not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. Many, if not most, are
designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests and desires.
I can't possibly see how you make that connection.
5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?
Maybe, maybe not. Since we all have very different definitions of 
"bombardment" and what acually is a "sexual image" it may be hard to 
draw that line. For example, I wouldn't call the pictures in question 
sexual.

Also consider that nude human bodies during all times have been one 
of the major motives for all kinds of art. Sculptures, paintings, 
drawings... and photography. Not everyone agrees that nudity is the 
limit to enforce.
--
anders
-
http://anders.hultman.nu/
med dagens bild och allt!



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
WHO did I TELL what?  I only made some statements, expressed some opnions, 
and asked some questions?


Tom C.


From: "John Forbes" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 14:18:47 -0600, Tom C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I myself believe there is an absolute truth and that their is a God with  
standards for right and wrong.

Some people believe not.  That's their right to choose.
Even having strongly held personal views and convictions, I believe it  is 
not my right to force mine on others.  If God has given individuals  the 
freedom to choose their way of life, who am I to take it away?

Now... the flipside... most people without a moral center (religious or  
otherwise), and I'm not intending to imply anything about any PDML  
member, won't give a damn about infringing on my freedoms, wishes, or  
desires.

Whilst it's perfectly in order for you to tell them what to do and what  
not to do?

Good grief!
If there were a God, I'd ask to be a lion.
John
--
Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Malcolm Smith
> Tom C wrote:

> Many of us, and let me presume all of us, filter out all 
> kinds of things we don't want to see or hear.  My satellite 
> TV controller has plenty of filters set up.
> 
> This constant filtering from all sources becomes exhausting 
> and tiresome.  I personally would prefer that the PDML, and 
> by extension the PUG, does not become a forum for the display 
> of what some  would consider sexually explicit images, even 
> if there's a warning/disclaimor.
> 
> It's as simple as that.  I know that's probably too much to 
> ask and that somone will suggest this a public forum that 
> reflects the disparate views of
> it's constituents.   Which is true.  I still would wish that 
> nudity, whether
> considered art by some or pornography by others, does not 
> become a topic of this list.

There is certainly a lot on the internet that *I* don't want to see, much
less my children. Having said that, as a subscriber of individual e-mails, I
am often warned twice that a PAW might not be for me; firstly by any OT
header in the subject line and secondly by having to click on a hyperlink to
see the image concerned. The PUG has it's own rules of what is permissible
to submit and what isn't.

I certainly don't like the feeling that certain images may upset people -
particularly here, but the images we see often reflect parts of human life
some would best like forgotten - like iWitness. But it happens.

By submitting some shots as PAWs, an element of choice is given with the
captions before the link. I retain responsibility over use of the computer
my end, but no doubt no matter how well I filter the outside world,
something unpleasant will come in, often without any warning being given.
PDML has always given me a choice.

Malcolm






Re: Metadiscussion: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, D. Glenn Arthur Jr., discombobulated, offered:

>At the same time, I would like to ask that those of 
>us who perceive such requests as censorshop try to 
>refrain from jumping the gun on accusations of
>actual censorship, and to try to understand where
>the request is coming from, so that we might find
>solutions instead of just girding our loins for a
>fight.  "Censorship" is a pretty emotionally charged
>word these days, so even when it's partially
>applicable, saying it tends to make the other side
>get all defensive.  Yeah, we need to point out
>the censorial aspects, but try to do so gently so
>that others can see why you say it rather than
>just making them go, "No I'm not!"

Guilty as charged.




Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
That's what I meant, not to imply any disrespect to others on the list.
If I remember my history correctly, Rome was already disintegrating, and the 
conversion of Constantine helped unite it to some degree.  The "official" 
State Christianity adopted numeorus  holidays, teachings, and beliefs from 
the pagan system of worship in Rome, and they continue to this day.

That form of Christianity was startlingly different from both the teaching 
and behavior of Christ himself, and the early 1st century congregations.


Tom C.


From: Keith Whaley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 13:17:45 -0700


Tom C wrote:
Rome never did become Christian.  It became "Christian".
Is that your way of saying, "in name only?"
I can't think of any other way of interpreting those two sentences.
keith  whaley
And you're way over the top.

Tom C.

From: graywolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 16:00:55 -0400

"My values are the only "right" ones. If you do not subscribe to them 
with every bit of your mind, body, and soul you are damned! If you do not 
I have the duty to send you to the maker for judgment right now."

Are those the values you are talking about?
100 years ago the white, puritan, English descended, culture here 
dictated right and wrong. They were right, and everyone else in the world 
was wrong. Of course they came to America because they wanted to get away 
from all those evil degenerate people in England.

Actually, though, to my way of thinking, intolerance and hypocrisy was 
the only thing they actually practiced.

In my experience life is far better today then it was when I was a kid 
40-60 years ago. When self-rightous "moral" "nuclear family" assholes had 
the "right" to abuse their kids.

And a thought to end this on, Rome never fell until after it became 
Christian.

REMEMBER! I DID NOT START THIS RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL SHIT THREAD! IF YOU 
DON'T WANT TO LOOK AT SOMEONES PHOTOS, THEN DON'T! OTHERWISE STICK YOUR 
HEADS BACK UP YOUR ASSHOLES WHERE THEY BELONG.

PS: I didn't much care for the photos myself.
--
Tom C wrote:
The problem I see with this whole thing is this...

--
graywolf
http://graywolfphoto.com/graywolf.html







Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Jostein

From: "Tom C"

> Rome never did become Christian.  It became "Christian".

Like so many other nations after them.

Interestingly, most "muslim" countries are more muslim than "christian"
nations are christian. That's one of the things they despise about the
western world. I must say I can understand their POV...:-)


Jostein
(waving the cloth before the bull again)



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, Christian, discombobulated, offered:

>> Rome never did become Christian.  It became "Christian".
>
>Hey  I've stayed out of this thread!  Why drag me into it
>
>Christian or "Christian"
>

ROTFLMAO




Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread John Forbes
On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 14:18:47 -0600, Tom C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I myself believe there is an absolute truth and that their is a God with  
standards for right and wrong.

Some people believe not.  That's their right to choose.
Even having strongly held personal views and convictions, I believe it  
is not my right to force mine on others.  If God has given individuals  
the freedom to choose their way of life, who am I to take it away?

Now... the flipside... most people without a moral center (religious or  
otherwise), and I'm not intending to imply anything about any PDML  
member, won't give a damn about infringing on my freedoms, wishes, or  
desires.

Whilst it's perfectly in order for you to tell them what to do and what  
not to do?

Good grief!
If there were a God, I'd ask to be a lion.
John
--
Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/


Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, graywolf, discombobulated, offered:

>REMEMBER! I DID NOT START THIS RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL [expletive deleted]
THREAD! IF YOU DON'T 
>WANT TO LOOK AT SOMEONES PHOTOS, THEN DON'T! OTHERWISE STICK YOUR HEADS
>BACK UP 
>YOUR expletive deleted] WHERE THEY BELONG.
>
>PS: I didn't much care for the photos myself.

Tom, *calm down* boy. Everyone's entitled to an opinion. 


Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, Bob Blakely, discombobulated, offered:

>Thanks! I appreciate hearing your opinion. It differs from mine, but you're
>entitled to it. Knowing other folks opinions is a Privilege. After all, they
>don't have to tell you.

I concur. And back at ya! ;-)




Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
I guess you're another victim... :)

Tom C.


From: Christian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 16:16:44 -0400 (GMT-04:00)


-Original Message-
From: Tom C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Rome never did become Christian.  It became "Christian".
Hey  I've stayed out of this thread!  Why drag me into it
Christian or "Christian"




RE: Metadiscussion: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread El Gringo
Sometimes I wonder if people who are so afraid of naked bodies are so afraid
because they cant control themselves??

-el gringo

-Original Message-
From: Tom C [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 3:08 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Metadiscussion: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW:
Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)


D. Glenn Arthur and all,

I'd like to respond more to your post, but lack the time and I need to go to
lunch.

Let's look at it from another simplistic viewpoint.  The PDML has had
little, if any, sexual content, art depicting nudity, art with sexual
content, however one wishes to define it, in the past.

Now two in one week.  As you said, the term bombardment was used in a
collective sense, not neccesarially accurate when used in reference to the
PDML only.

We have all done well and fine without it in the past... why bring it in
now?  How many more persons will be encouraged to present similar, if not
stronger images?  How many will not use any disgression when posting the
link?

That's probably all I'll post.  I sincerely want this to be a
Pentax/Photography forum.  Nothing more, nothing less.

Tom C.




>From: "D. Glenn Arthur Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Metadiscussion: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of
>Eve, the three shot series)
>Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 15:33:42 -0400 (EDT)
>
>I would have labelled this Off Topic, but it's actually about
>the list even though it's not about photography or cameras
>per se any more.
>
>Tom C wrote:
> > 1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
>
>Gonna come back to that one...
>
> > 2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What
>is
> > OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did
>standards
> > change?
>
>Mores have changed.  Have _morals_ actually _declined_?  Not
>that I'm usually one to argue "value relativism", but it does
>seem to me that in this particular area it is customs and
>taboos that are at stake, not morality in any meaningfully
>measurable sense.  Does a shift in "decency" standards
>necessarily correspond to an increase in theft, fraud,
>murder, broken promises, usury, and so on, or is it really
>more a change in fashion of sorts?  Do people actually
>behave in a less _moral_ manner today?
>
> > 4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
> > Man/Woman/Child.
>
>No, that's a relatively recent development.  Civilization
>was built on the _extended_ family.
>
> > How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual
> > images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family.
>Many,
> > if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests
>and
> > desires.
>
>You may have a point there.  I'm not convinced that you do,
>but I can see that you might.  It would mean that most people
>are not wired the way I am, but I guess I should not find
>that possibility surprising.
>
> > 5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
> > bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?
>
>"Bombard"???  Okay, admittedly I have not looked at very
>many of the PAW images and I'm a couple months behind on
>the PUG, but -- and this is an actual question, not a
>rhetorical one -- is this forum actually being _bombarded_
>with sexual images?  Or is it just a couple of them this
>week that's suddenly being interpreted as a bombardment?
>
>*IF* the answer is that it's just this week, then the next
>question obviously becomes, does this mean that no sexual
>imagery ever is the only acceptable (to you) guideline?
>
>Or is the perception that you are being "bombarded" here
>a result of the bombardment with sexual imagery in the
>world at large more than here, so that any inkling here,
>however usual or unusual for here, is "oh no, not more of
>this!" where the rest of "this" is on the telly and
>billboards and such?
>
> > As far as disparaging anyones god, a work that distorts and corrupts or
> > disprects an idea/concept/belief that some consider as sacred, can
>certainly
> > be called disparaging.
>
>Distort ... corrupt ... disrepect ... Re-examine?  Question?
>Re-interpret?  Show another side of?  Doesn't "disrespect"
>imply _intent_, and doesn't "corrupt" depend on a particular
>point of view?  I *do* see where you're coming from on that
>one -- there are things you could do to holy symbols or
>depiction

Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, Tom C, discombobulated, offered:

>Bombardment may not have been the right word... I was using it in a general 
>sense... we are bombarded from numerous sources, and I was lumping the 
>recent PDML posts in with the rest.

Ahhh, understood. Except that there is one problem with that. I am not
bombarded! Oh that i were ;-)




Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread El Gringo
I AGREE WITH EVERYTHING YOU SAID I MEAN EVERYTHING!!

-el gringo

-Original Message-
From: graywolf [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 3:01 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)


"My values are the only "right" ones. If you do not subscribe to them with
every
bit of your mind, body, and soul you are damned! If you do not I have the
duty
to send you to the maker for judgment right now."

Are those the values you are talking about?

100 years ago the white, puritan, English descended, culture here dictated
right
and wrong. They were right, and everyone else in the world was wrong. Of
course
they came to America because they wanted to get away from all those evil
degenerate people in England.

Actually, though, to my way of thinking, intolerance and hypocrisy was the
only
thing they actually practiced.

In my experience life is far better today then it was when I was a kid 40-60
years ago. When self-rightous "moral" "nuclear family" assholes had the
"right"
to abuse their kids.

And a thought to end this on, Rome never fell until after it became
Christian.

REMEMBER! I DID NOT START THIS RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL SHIT THREAD! IF YOU DON'T
WANT TO LOOK AT SOMEONES PHOTOS, THEN DON'T! OTHERWISE STICK YOUR HEADS BACK
UP
YOUR ASSHOLES WHERE THEY BELONG.

PS: I didn't much care for the photos myself.

--

Tom C wrote:
> The problem I see with this whole thing is this...


--
graywolf
http://graywolfphoto.com/graywolf.html




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
I myself believe there is an absolute truth and that their is a God with 
standards for right and wrong.

Some people believe not.  That's their right to choose.
Even having strongly held personal views and convictions, I believe it is 
not my right to force mine on others.  If God has given individuals the 
freedom to choose their way of life, who am I to take it away?

Now... the flipside... most people without a moral center (religious or 
otherwise), and I'm not intending to imply anything about any PDML member, 
won't give a damn about infringing on my freedoms, wishes, or desires.


Tom C.


From: graywolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 16:00:55 -0400

"My values are the only "right" ones. If you do not subscribe to them with 
every bit of your mind, body, and soul you are damned! If you do not I have 
the duty to send you to the maker for judgment right now."

Are those the values you are talking about?
100 years ago the white, puritan, English descended, culture here dictated 
right and wrong. They were right, and everyone else in the world was wrong. 
Of course they came to America because they wanted to get away from all 
those evil degenerate people in England.

Actually, though, to my way of thinking, intolerance and hypocrisy was the 
only thing they actually practiced.

In my experience life is far better today then it was when I was a kid 
40-60 years ago. When self-rightous "moral" "nuclear family" assholes had 
the "right" to abuse their kids.

And a thought to end this on, Rome never fell until after it became 
Christian.

REMEMBER! I DID NOT START THIS RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL SHIT THREAD! IF YOU 
DON'T WANT TO LOOK AT SOMEONES PHOTOS, THEN DON'T! OTHERWISE STICK YOUR 
HEADS BACK UP YOUR ASSHOLES WHERE THEY BELONG.

PS: I didn't much care for the photos myself.
--
Tom C wrote:
The problem I see with this whole thing is this...

--
graywolf
http://graywolfphoto.com/graywolf.html




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Keith Whaley

Tom C wrote:
Rome never did become Christian.  It became "Christian".
Is that your way of saying, "in name only?"
I can't think of any other way of interpreting those two sentences.
keith  whaley
And you're way over the top.

Tom C.

From: graywolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the 
three shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 16:00:55 -0400

"My values are the only "right" ones. If you do not subscribe to them 
with every bit of your mind, body, and soul you are damned! If you do 
not I have the duty to send you to the maker for judgment right now."

Are those the values you are talking about?
100 years ago the white, puritan, English descended, culture here 
dictated right and wrong. They were right, and everyone else in the 
world was wrong. Of course they came to America because they wanted to 
get away from all those evil degenerate people in England.

Actually, though, to my way of thinking, intolerance and hypocrisy was 
the only thing they actually practiced.

In my experience life is far better today then it was when I was a kid 
40-60 years ago. When self-rightous "moral" "nuclear family" assholes 
had the "right" to abuse their kids.

And a thought to end this on, Rome never fell until after it became 
Christian.

REMEMBER! I DID NOT START THIS RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL SHIT THREAD! IF YOU 
DON'T WANT TO LOOK AT SOMEONES PHOTOS, THEN DON'T! OTHERWISE STICK 
YOUR HEADS BACK UP YOUR ASSHOLES WHERE THEY BELONG.

PS: I didn't much care for the photos myself.
--
Tom C wrote:
The problem I see with this whole thing is this...

--
graywolf
http://graywolfphoto.com/graywolf.html






Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Christian


-Original Message-
From: Tom C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> Rome never did become Christian.  It became "Christian".

Hey  I've stayed out of this thread!  Why drag me into it

Christian or "Christian"




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Keith Whaley
'S a'matter, Greywolf?
Someone say something that really resurrected your P.O. button?
keith
graywolf wrote:
"My values are the only "right" ones. If you do not subscribe to them 
with every bit of your mind, body, and soul you are damned! If you do 
not I have the duty to send you to the maker for judgment right now."

Are those the values you are talking about?
100 years ago the white, puritan, English descended, culture here 
dictated right and wrong. They were right, and everyone else in the 
world was wrong. Of course they came to America because they wanted to 
get away from all those evil degenerate people in England.

Actually, though, to my way of thinking, intolerance and hypocrisy was 
the only thing they actually practiced.

In my experience life is far better today then it was when I was a kid 
40-60 years ago. When self-rightous "moral" "nuclear family" assholes 
had the "right" to abuse their kids.

And a thought to end this on, Rome never fell until after it became 
Christian.

REMEMBER! I DID NOT START THIS RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL SHIT THREAD! IF YOU 
DON'T WANT TO LOOK AT SOMEONES PHOTOS, THEN DON'T! OTHERWISE STICK YOUR 
HEADS BACK UP YOUR ASSHOLES WHERE THEY BELONG.

PS: I didn't much care for the photos myself.
--
Tom C wrote:
The problem I see with this whole thing is this...





Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
Rome never did become Christian.  It became "Christian".
And you're way over the top.

Tom C.


From: graywolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 16:00:55 -0400

"My values are the only "right" ones. If you do not subscribe to them with 
every bit of your mind, body, and soul you are damned! If you do not I have 
the duty to send you to the maker for judgment right now."

Are those the values you are talking about?
100 years ago the white, puritan, English descended, culture here dictated 
right and wrong. They were right, and everyone else in the world was wrong. 
Of course they came to America because they wanted to get away from all 
those evil degenerate people in England.

Actually, though, to my way of thinking, intolerance and hypocrisy was the 
only thing they actually practiced.

In my experience life is far better today then it was when I was a kid 
40-60 years ago. When self-rightous "moral" "nuclear family" assholes had 
the "right" to abuse their kids.

And a thought to end this on, Rome never fell until after it became 
Christian.

REMEMBER! I DID NOT START THIS RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL SHIT THREAD! IF YOU 
DON'T WANT TO LOOK AT SOMEONES PHOTOS, THEN DON'T! OTHERWISE STICK YOUR 
HEADS BACK UP YOUR ASSHOLES WHERE THEY BELONG.

PS: I didn't much care for the photos myself.
--
Tom C wrote:
The problem I see with this whole thing is this...

--
graywolf
http://graywolfphoto.com/graywolf.html




RE: Metadiscussion: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
D. Glenn Arthur and all,
I'd like to respond more to your post, but lack the time and I need to go to 
lunch.

Let's look at it from another simplistic viewpoint.  The PDML has had 
little, if any, sexual content, art depicting nudity, art with sexual 
content, however one wishes to define it, in the past.

Now two in one week.  As you said, the term bombardment was used in a 
collective sense, not neccesarially accurate when used in reference to the 
PDML only.

We have all done well and fine without it in the past... why bring it in 
now?  How many more persons will be encouraged to present similar, if not 
stronger images?  How many will not use any disgression when posting the 
link?

That's probably all I'll post.  I sincerely want this to be a 
Pentax/Photography forum.  Nothing more, nothing less.

Tom C.


From: "D. Glenn Arthur Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Metadiscussion: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of 
Eve, the three shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 15:33:42 -0400 (EDT)

I would have labelled this Off Topic, but it's actually about
the list even though it's not about photography or cameras
per se any more.
Tom C wrote:
> 1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
Gonna come back to that one...
> 2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What 
is
> OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did 
standards
> change?

Mores have changed.  Have _morals_ actually _declined_?  Not
that I'm usually one to argue "value relativism", but it does
seem to me that in this particular area it is customs and
taboos that are at stake, not morality in any meaningfully
measurable sense.  Does a shift in "decency" standards
necessarily correspond to an increase in theft, fraud,
murder, broken promises, usury, and so on, or is it really
more a change in fashion of sorts?  Do people actually
behave in a less _moral_ manner today?
> 4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
> Man/Woman/Child.
No, that's a relatively recent development.  Civilization
was built on the _extended_ family.
> How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual
> images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. 
Many,
> if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests 
and
> desires.

You may have a point there.  I'm not convinced that you do,
but I can see that you might.  It would mean that most people
are not wired the way I am, but I guess I should not find
that possibility surprising.
> 5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
> bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?
"Bombard"???  Okay, admittedly I have not looked at very
many of the PAW images and I'm a couple months behind on
the PUG, but -- and this is an actual question, not a
rhetorical one -- is this forum actually being _bombarded_
with sexual images?  Or is it just a couple of them this
week that's suddenly being interpreted as a bombardment?
*IF* the answer is that it's just this week, then the next
question obviously becomes, does this mean that no sexual
imagery ever is the only acceptable (to you) guideline?
Or is the perception that you are being "bombarded" here
a result of the bombardment with sexual imagery in the
world at large more than here, so that any inkling here,
however usual or unusual for here, is "oh no, not more of
this!" where the rest of "this" is on the telly and
billboards and such?
> As far as disparaging anyones god, a work that distorts and corrupts or
> disprects an idea/concept/belief that some consider as sacred, can 
certainly
> be called disparaging.

Distort ... corrupt ... disrepect ... Re-examine?  Question?
Re-interpret?  Show another side of?  Doesn't "disrespect"
imply _intent_, and doesn't "corrupt" depend on a particular
point of view?  I *do* see where you're coming from on that
one -- there are things you could do to holy symbols or
depictions of my saviour which would similarly upset me,
to be honest (though this one does not) --  but I think you're
using language that polarizes the debate rather than fostering
communication on the points you're trying to get across.
Bob Blakely wrote:
< Since when does a request for discretion become censorship. Are we now
< reduced to the point where a mere request for voluntary restraint is
< suggesting is censorship? If this is true, is you advocating the folks
< censorship in making requests?
I'd say the request is in a grey area with regards to
concepts and definitions of censorship.  No, this is
clearly not an example of the _legal_, or strict,
definition of censors

RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread alex wetmore
On Tue, 13 Jul 2004, Jens Bladt wrote:
> I second that, Tom.
> I would prefer to be able to see PDML stuff on the screen, even if there are
> children present, at work, the libraries etc., where I don't want do cause
> others to feel embarrassed.

There was plenty of warning on these images.

I was curious to see them, but first read the messages while I was at
work.  I went to look at them from home, but they had already been
removed by then.

PAWs should be allowed to display anything which is legal to display.
If the content might offend some folks then there should be a warning
saying that.

Among a group of friends who often forward things to each other we
just put a small tag "not worksafe" before links which wouldn't be
appropriate to have on your display in most companies.

alex



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread graywolf
"My values are the only "right" ones. If you do not subscribe to them with every 
bit of your mind, body, and soul you are damned! If you do not I have the duty 
to send you to the maker for judgment right now."

Are those the values you are talking about?
100 years ago the white, puritan, English descended, culture here dictated right 
and wrong. They were right, and everyone else in the world was wrong. Of course 
they came to America because they wanted to get away from all those evil 
degenerate people in England.

Actually, though, to my way of thinking, intolerance and hypocrisy was the only 
thing they actually practiced.

In my experience life is far better today then it was when I was a kid 40-60 
years ago. When self-rightous "moral" "nuclear family" assholes had the "right" 
to abuse their kids.

And a thought to end this on, Rome never fell until after it became Christian.
REMEMBER! I DID NOT START THIS RELIGIOUS/POLITICAL SHIT THREAD! IF YOU DON'T 
WANT TO LOOK AT SOMEONES PHOTOS, THEN DON'T! OTHERWISE STICK YOUR HEADS BACK UP 
YOUR ASSHOLES WHERE THEY BELONG.

PS: I didn't much care for the photos myself.
--
Tom C wrote:
The problem I see with this whole thing is this...

--
graywolf
http://graywolfphoto.com/graywolf.html



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread El Gringo

I'm sorry I implied your statement was ignorant...  Julius Caesar, as the
ruler of possibly the most powerful empire ever in history, by nature of his
position, has more insight into social matters than you or I ever will.  And
if you think about what he is saying for a moment, you will realize, that it
is in essence, a condemnation of the state of Rome.  Rome itself, could only
be blamed for crime, because Rome could not keep the people out of
poverty...  Imagine that you rule the most powerful nation on earth, and
when I say rule, I mean, RULE, not REPRESENT  Imagine that, and then
imagine how tempting it would be to behave like Stalin, just send the
criminals to Siberia...  Stalin was a fool, Caesar on the other hand, at
least had the intelligence to see how his nation was flawed, and for me,
when a person in that heady position, is driven to such self-assessing
insight, I can only assume there is some truth in that insight.


-el gringo


"What makes Julius Ceasar, of all people, an authority on the subject?"


Tom C.




Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
LOL!
mike wilson wrote:
Steve Desjardins wrote:
The cultural moires and/or taboos of the viewer are an essential part of
a photo.

But is there a pattern to it?
.
--
Daniel J. Matyola (908)725-3322  fax:(908)707-0399
Stanley, Powers & Matyola mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
78 Grove Street   mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Somerville, NJ 08876  http://geocities.com/dmatyola/



Re: OT: Afghan girl (was Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Keith Whaley
Well and rationally countered, Bob.
keith whaley
Bob W wrote:
Hi,

BTW I have a real problem with the Afghan Girl pic

I'm not quite sure how you can have a problem with the original photo.
As far as I know, when he took it he was not really aware of what he
had in the can until it was processed. He was taking photos around a
displaced persons camp, as that type of photographer does every day,
and she was just one of many.
It seems to me that unless you have a problem with that type of
photography in general then it is probably rather inconsistent to
single out that particular picture.

and worse the fact that he
went back for another dip at the trough,

I think you're putting a very negative spin on his motives. According
to what I have read, he returned many times looking for her to try and
learn what had become of her, partly to satisfy public curiosity,
partly to satisfy his own, and partly to tell her the story of her
photograph. Eventually he succeeded.

as far I I'm aware she's still no
better off even after all it's done for them (McCurry and NG).

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/03/0311_020312_sharbat.html

NG and McCurry set up a fund for Afghan girls at the request of the
woman in question. Here is some information about it:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/12/1205_031205_afghanfund.html
It's probably true that National Geographic and Steve McCurry have made more
money out of the photograph than the fund has earned, but that is one
of the dilemmas of having professional journalists telling us about
the world. Different journalists resolve the dilemma in different ways.



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Jens Bladt
I second that, Tom.
I would prefer to be able to see PDML stuff on the screen, even if there are
children present, at work, the libraries etc., where I don't want do cause
others to feel embarrassed.
Jens Bladt

mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-Oprindelig meddelelse-
Fra: Tom C [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 13. juli 2004 21:36
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)


Many of us, and let me presume all of us, filter out all kinds of things we
don't want to see or hear.  My satellite TV controller has plenty of filters
set up.

This constant filtering from all sources becomes exhausting and tiresome.  I
personally would prefer that the PDML, and by extension the PUG, does not
become a forum for the display of what some  would consider sexually
explicit images, even if there's a warning/disclaimor.

It's as simple as that.  I know that's probably too much to ask and that
somone will suggest this a public forum that reflects the disparate views of
it's constituents.   Which is true.  I still would wish that nudity, whether
considered art by some or pornography by others, does not become a topic of
this list.



Tom C.





>From: Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
>shot series)
>Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 15:17:08 -0400
>
>
>On Jul 13, 2004, at 2:29 PM, Bob Blakely wrote:
>>
>>
>>"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
>>bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"
>>
>>
>We already have that. No one here is bombarded with sexual images. For one,
>sex and artful nudity are not the same thing. More importantly, to the best
>of my knowledge no one on the forum has ever referenced a nude without
>indicating that viewer discretion is advised. If you choose of our own free
>well to view the piece, that certainly doesn't constitute bombardment.
>Paul
>






Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Bob Blakely
Thanks! I appreciate hearing your opinion. It differs from mine, but you're
entitled to it. Knowing other folks opinions is a Privilege. After all, they
don't have to tell you.

Regards,
Bob...

From: "Cotty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


> On 13/7/04, Bob Blakely, discombobulated, offered:
>
> >"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
> >bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"
> >
> >Now, the preceding was a request. It was only a request. It was not a
> >demand. Again, failure to honor the request will not result in any form
of
> >discipline. Again, the request may be ignored. In fact you have my
> >permission to ridicule me for stating it.
>
> Okay Bob:
>
> RIDICULOUS
>
> Here's my request:
>
> I think things work pretty well the way things are, I haven't noticed any
> bombardment of sexual images. I think anyone who considers posting images
> of a similar nature in the future should not be discouraged.



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
Many of us, and let me presume all of us, filter out all kinds of things we 
don't want to see or hear.  My satellite TV controller has plenty of filters 
set up.

This constant filtering from all sources becomes exhausting and tiresome.  I 
personally would prefer that the PDML, and by extension the PUG, does not 
become a forum for the display of what some  would consider sexually 
explicit images, even if there's a warning/disclaimor.

It's as simple as that.  I know that's probably too much to ask and that 
somone will suggest this a public forum that reflects the disparate views of 
it's constituents.   Which is true.  I still would wish that nudity, whether 
considered art by some or pornography by others, does not become a topic of 
this list.


Tom C.


From: Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 15:17:08 -0400

On Jul 13, 2004, at 2:29 PM, Bob Blakely wrote:

"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"

We already have that. No one here is bombarded with sexual images. For one, 
sex and artful nudity are not the same thing. More importantly, to the best 
of my knowledge no one on the forum has ever referenced a nude without 
indicating that viewer discretion is advised. If you choose of our own free 
well to view the piece, that certainly doesn't constitute bombardment.
Paul




Metadiscussion: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread D. Glenn Arthur Jr.
I would have labelled this Off Topic, but it's actually about
the list even though it's not about photography or cameras 
per se any more.

Tom C wrote:
> 1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.

Gonna come back to that one...

> 2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What is 
> OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did standards 
> change?

Mores have changed.  Have _morals_ actually _declined_?  Not 
that I'm usually one to argue "value relativism", but it does
seem to me that in this particular area it is customs and
taboos that are at stake, not morality in any meaningfully
measurable sense.  Does a shift in "decency" standards 
necessarily correspond to an increase in theft, fraud, 
murder, broken promises, usury, and so on, or is it really
more a change in fashion of sorts?  Do people actually 
behave in a less _moral_ manner today?

> 4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family. 
> Man/Woman/Child.  

No, that's a relatively recent development.  Civilization 
was built on the _extended_ family.

> How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual 
> images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. Many, 
> if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests and 
> desires.

You may have a point there.  I'm not convinced that you do,
but I can see that you might.  It would mean that most people
are not wired the way I am, but I guess I should not find 
that possibility surprising.

> 5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't 
> bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?

"Bombard"???  Okay, admittedly I have not looked at very
many of the PAW images and I'm a couple months behind on
the PUG, but -- and this is an actual question, not a
rhetorical one -- is this forum actually being _bombarded_
with sexual images?  Or is it just a couple of them this
week that's suddenly being interpreted as a bombardment?

*IF* the answer is that it's just this week, then the next
question obviously becomes, does this mean that no sexual
imagery ever is the only acceptable (to you) guideline?

Or is the perception that you are being "bombarded" here
a result of the bombardment with sexual imagery in the
world at large more than here, so that any inkling here,
however usual or unusual for here, is "oh no, not more of 
this!" where the rest of "this" is on the telly and 
billboards and such?

> As far as disparaging anyones god, a work that distorts and corrupts or 
> disprects an idea/concept/belief that some consider as sacred, can certainly 
> be called disparaging.

Distort ... corrupt ... disrepect ... Re-examine?  Question?
Re-interpret?  Show another side of?  Doesn't "disrespect"
imply _intent_, and doesn't "corrupt" depend on a particular
point of view?  I *do* see where you're coming from on that
one -- there are things you could do to holy symbols or 
depictions of my saviour which would similarly upset me,
to be honest (though this one does not) --  but I think you're 
using language that polarizes the debate rather than fostering 
communication on the points you're trying to get across.

Bob Blakely wrote:
< Since when does a request for discretion become censorship. Are we now
< reduced to the point where a mere request for voluntary restraint is
< suggesting is censorship? If this is true, is you advocating the folks
< censorship in making requests?

I'd say the request is in a grey area with regards to 
concepts and definitions of censorship.  No, this is
clearly not an example of the _legal_, or strict,
definition of censorship, but it shares much in common
with actual censorship.  I'm _not_ going to claim that
it's morally equivalent, because, as I said, it's in a
grey area, but I do not think it is unreasonable for
people to have an initial emotional reaction the same 
as they would react to a call for censorship. 

You see, it's advocacy of a community standard which
would impose censure on certain things; no formal
censor, since messages are not manually approved by
a moderator before posting, but it's an exhortation
for others to raise their voices in support of this
"no sexual bombardment" idea and _make_sexual_images_unwelcome_.
The result would be "self-censorship" not from an
innate sense of "I shouldn't do that", but from _fear_
of community disapproval, complaint, argument ...
whatever force the would-be-censors can bring to
bear in this medium ... the fear of becoming 
"outcast".

It's a tricky thing.  The request is, in some senses,
a reasonable one:  "I don't want to see these things
and I would prefer a forum where they are not present".
But asking others to make them unwelcome means changing
the environment for others in a way that is, to them,
for the worse.  And let's face it, it's really hard
to make such a request without the folks it's aimed
at feeling like it's an attempt to restraint them 

Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
Bombardment may not have been the right word... I was using it in a general 
sense... we are bombarded from numerous sources, and I was lumping the 
recent PDML posts in with the rest.


Tom C.


From: Cotty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "pentax list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 19:50:43 +0100

On 13/7/04, Bob Blakely, discombobulated, offered:
>"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
>bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"
One or two pics in (a long time) is hardly 'bombardment'!

Cheers,
  Cotty
___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Paul Stenquist
On Jul 13, 2004, at 2:29 PM, Bob Blakely wrote:

"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"

We already have that. No one here is bombarded with sexual images. For 
one, sex and artful nudity are not the same thing. More importantly, to 
the best of my knowledge no one on the forum has ever referenced a nude 
without indicating that viewer discretion is advised. If you choose of 
our own free well to view the piece, that certainly doesn't constitute 
bombardment.
Paul



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, Bob Blakely, discombobulated, offered:

>"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
>bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"
>
>Now, the preceding was a request. It was only a request. It was not a
>demand. Again, failure to honor the request will not result in any form of
>discipline. Again, the request may be ignored. In fact you have my
>permission to ridicule me for stating it.

Okay Bob:

RIDICULOUS

Here's my request:

I think things work pretty well the way things are, I haven't noticed any
bombardment of sexual images. I think anyone who considers posting images
of a similar nature in the future should not be discouraged.

Best,




Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread John Forbes
Personally, I think there are far too many racing car pictures on this  
site.

As a devout Walkist, any form of car picture tends to offend me, and fast  
cars pictures tend to offend me absolutely.

Now I don't want to impose any form of censorship, so just stop posting  
them.

I know there are only a few Walkists here, but we're right and you're  
wrong, so just do what we say.  Ours is the one true religion!

John

On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 11:29:25 -0700, Bob Blakely <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Since when does a request for discretion become censorship. Are we now
reduced to the point where a mere request for voluntary restraint is
suggesting is censorship? If this is true, is you advocating the folks
censorship in making requests?
I think your judgment that what Tom suggested censorship was way off  
base.
And no, I am not censoring you from accusing folks of suggesting  
censorship,
by the way. Make and report your false assumptions all you like. I even
suggest that you make them seem more real by assigning me (or others) to
some group about whom you have some caricature view of and then accuse  
us of
those views! GAWD! The prejudice!

Now, the following is a request. It is only a request. It is not a  
demand.
Failure to honor the request will not result in any form of discipline.  
The
request may be ignored.

"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"
Now, the preceding was a request. It was only a request. It was not a
demand. Again, failure to honor the request will not result in any form  
of
discipline. Again, the request may be ignored. In fact you have my
permission to ridicule me for stating it.

Regards,
Bob...
From: "Cotty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

On 13/7/04, Tom C, discombobulated, offered:
>1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
>2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.   
What
is
>OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did
standards
>change?
>3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display  
of
>nudity put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed  
today.
>4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
>Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks
down,
>families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay we see
today
>in society as a whole.  How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual
>images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family.
Many,
>if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests
and
>desires.
>5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
>bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?
I take your point Tom, but what you are suggesting is censorship. Fine  
if
you were made to sit in front of your monitor and had to view the  
picture
in question, but the fact is that you don't, especially when the
photographer issues guidance with a warning. It was your choice to view
the images. There are those on this list who disagree with what you have
written above (and I may not necessarily be one), and what you are
suggesting leaves no option for them to view. The way the original  
poster
proceeded was fair and correct IMO.


--
Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/


Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, Bob Blakely, discombobulated, offered:

>"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
>bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"

One or two pics in (a long time) is hardly 'bombardment'!




Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, Tom C, discombobulated, offered:

>I respect what you said.  I am not suggesting censorship.  I am suggesting 
>self-sensorship.
>
>I for one, believe in the right to free speech and free expression.  The 
>obvious problem occurs when exercising ones rights to such trample on/or 
>violates another perceived rights.
>
>We all exercise a degree of self-censorship when we are about to say/write 
>something and then have a second thought about how that might affect the 
>recipient, or the recipient's view of ourselves.  I am simply suggesting we 
>exercise that same thoughtfulness when it comes to presenting images.
>
>Granted, these images are not imbedded in the PDML... and an individual has 
>a choice...

Understood ;-)




Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Peter J. Alling
For which we should all be thankful...
Jens Bladt wrote:
It's interesting that the last supper apparently always takes place at only
three sides of the table - too make life easier for painters and
photographers :-)
Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt
-Oprindelig meddelelse-
Fra: Amita Guha [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 12. juli 2004 23:58
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)
Hey Paul, interesting shots. By the way, have you ever seen "Yo Mama's
Last Supper" by Renee Cox? It was the life-sized photograph that was
displayed at the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 2001. It caused quite a flap
because it depicted the Last Supper, with Jesus portrayed as a naked
woman. I went to see it at the museum and I found it quite powerful. I'm
having trouble finding a decent-sized image of it online but here is a
small one. (Collin, this obviously isn't for you.)
http://www.nerve.com/Photography/Cox/Shocking/viewimage.asp?num=4
Amita

 




OT: Afghan girl (was Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Bob W
Hi,

> BTW I have a real problem with the Afghan Girl pic

I'm not quite sure how you can have a problem with the original photo.
As far as I know, when he took it he was not really aware of what he
had in the can until it was processed. He was taking photos around a
displaced persons camp, as that type of photographer does every day,
and she was just one of many.

It seems to me that unless you have a problem with that type of
photography in general then it is probably rather inconsistent to
single out that particular picture.

> and worse the fact that he
> went back for another dip at the trough,

I think you're putting a very negative spin on his motives. According
to what I have read, he returned many times looking for her to try and
learn what had become of her, partly to satisfy public curiosity,
partly to satisfy his own, and partly to tell her the story of her
photograph. Eventually he succeeded.

> as far I I'm aware she's still no
> better off even after all it's done for them (McCurry and NG).

> http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/03/0311_020312_sharbat.html

NG and McCurry set up a fund for Afghan girls at the request of the
woman in question. Here is some information about it:

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/12/1205_031205_afghanfund.html

It's probably true that National Geographic and Steve McCurry have made more
money out of the photograph than the fund has earned, but that is one
of the dilemmas of having professional journalists telling us about
the world. Different journalists resolve the dilemma in different ways.

-- 
Cheers,
 Bob



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
I might also add that the disclaimor regarding the content of an 
image/movie/lyrics, etc., no matter how well intentioned, is the loophole 
that is used by entertainment industries to present material that might 
otherwise be considered totally objectionable.

There is a great dichotomy in society and even individuals today regarding 
what we view as proper behavior for ourselves and others vs. what we view as 
acceptable to watch or look at.

If rape is wrong, why depict it in popular entertainment for young people to 
view.  If drug use is wrong, why depict it in popular entertainment for 
young people to view?

There's the saying 'we are what we eat'.  That can also be applied in a more 
intellectual sense.  Our behavior and mores can be affected by what we 
consume and process with our eyes, ears and brains.

Not meaning to be on the soapbox here... heading back down.
Tom C.


From: Cotty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "pentax list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 18:47:48 +0100

On 13/7/04, Tom C, discombobulated, offered:
>1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
>2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What 
is
>OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did 
standards
>change?
>3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display of
>nudity put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed today.
>4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
>Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks 
down,
>families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay we see 
today
>in society as a whole.  How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual
>images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. 
Many,
>if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests 
and
>desires.
>5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
>bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?

I take your point Tom, but what you are suggesting is censorship. Fine if
you were made to sit in front of your monitor and had to view the picture
in question, but the fact is that you don't, especially when the
photographer issues guidance with a warning. It was your choice to view
the images. There are those on this list who disagree with what you have
written above (and I may not necessarily be one), and what you are
suggesting leaves no option for them to view. The way the original poster
proceeded was fair and correct IMO.
With great respect,

Cheers,
  Cotty
___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Bob Blakely
Since when does a request for discretion become censorship. Are we now
reduced to the point where a mere request for voluntary restraint is
suggesting is censorship? If this is true, is you advocating the folks
censorship in making requests?

I think your judgment that what Tom suggested censorship was way off base.
And no, I am not censoring you from accusing folks of suggesting censorship,
by the way. Make and report your false assumptions all you like. I even
suggest that you make them seem more real by assigning me (or others) to
some group about whom you have some caricature view of and then accuse us of
those views! GAWD! The prejudice!

Now, the following is a request. It is only a request. It is not a demand.
Failure to honor the request will not result in any form of discipline. The
request may be ignored.

"Can't we have a forum for discussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?"

Now, the preceding was a request. It was only a request. It was not a
demand. Again, failure to honor the request will not result in any form of
discipline. Again, the request may be ignored. In fact you have my
permission to ridicule me for stating it.

Regards,
Bob...

From: "Cotty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


> On 13/7/04, Tom C, discombobulated, offered:
>
> >1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
> >2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What
is
> >OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did
standards
> >change?
> >3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display of
> >nudity put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed today.
> >4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
> >Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks
down,
> >families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay we see
today
> >in society as a whole.  How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual
> >images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family.
Many,
> >if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests
and
> >desires.
> >5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
> >bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?
>
> I take your point Tom, but what you are suggesting is censorship. Fine if
> you were made to sit in front of your monitor and had to view the picture
> in question, but the fact is that you don't, especially when the
> photographer issues guidance with a warning. It was your choice to view
> the images. There are those on this list who disagree with what you have
> written above (and I may not necessarily be one), and what you are
> suggesting leaves no option for them to view. The way the original poster
> proceeded was fair and correct IMO.



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
You are mispplying my words.  I did not say or think "society will be 
destroyed because of nudity".

I said 'moral decay contributes to the decay or society as a whole'.
What makes Julius Ceasar, of all people, an authority on the subject?
Tom C.


From: "El Gringo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 13:13:13 -0500

Society decays for any number of reasons.  Poverty is the worst.  I think
perhaps, nudity in society is not a cause but an effect of other problems.
Julius Ceasar said that "Poverty is the mother of all crime."  Poverty
fosters immorality.  Decay stems from poverty not from nudity.  To think
that society will be destroyed because of nudity, is absurd, narrow-minded,
even ignorant.
-el gringo
-Original Message-
From: Tom C [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 12:42 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)
The problem I see with this whole thing is this...
1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What is
OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did standards
change?
3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display of
nudity put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed today.
4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks down,
families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay we see today
in society as a whole.  How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual
images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. Many,
if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests and
desires.
5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?
As far as disparaging anyones god, a work that distorts and corrupts or
disprects an idea/concept/belief that some consider as sacred, can 
certainly
be called disparaging.

Tom C.


>From: Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
>shot series)
>Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 13:02:48 -0400
>
>I don't think the work disparages anyone's God. It simply applies the 
Last
>Supper as a metaphor. One can interpret in any number of ways. Perhaps it
>speaks to the dehumanizing of women as sex objects. Perhaps it speaks to
>the sacrifice women make in bringing children into the world. Like most
>art, it is ambiguous. It's a shame that anyone is offended by art, 
whether
>it be good art or bad art. I believe that art is usually too vague to 
take
>that personally.
>Paul
>
>On Jul 13, 2004, at 11:47 AM, Bob Blakely wrote:
>
>>In fact, it was - .done (that is, portrayed by this artist) to my God 
who
>>is
>>my Father and my best friend.
>>
>>Regards,
>>Bob...
>>
>>From: "Amita Guha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>
>>
>>>>It brings great pain and sadness  to me (no, it's not the
>>>>nudity per se). It's as though this was done to one of my
>>>>parents, or perhaps my best friend.
>>>>
>>>>In fact, it was.
>>>
>>>Please explain.
>>
>





RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread El Gringo
Society decays for any number of reasons.  Poverty is the worst.  I think
perhaps, nudity in society is not a cause but an effect of other problems.
Julius Ceasar said that "Poverty is the mother of all crime."  Poverty
fosters immorality.  Decay stems from poverty not from nudity.  To think
that society will be destroyed because of nudity, is absurd, narrow-minded,
even ignorant.

-el gringo

-Original Message-
From: Tom C [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2004 12:42 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
shot series)


The problem I see with this whole thing is this...

1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What is
OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did standards
change?
3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display of
nudity put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed today.
4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks down,
families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay we see today
in society as a whole.  How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual
images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. Many,
if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests and
desires.
5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?

As far as disparaging anyones god, a work that distorts and corrupts or
disprects an idea/concept/belief that some consider as sacred, can certainly
be called disparaging.


Tom C.





>From: Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three
>shot series)
>Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 13:02:48 -0400
>
>I don't think the work disparages anyone's God. It simply applies the Last
>Supper as a metaphor. One can interpret in any number of ways. Perhaps it
>speaks to the dehumanizing of women as sex objects. Perhaps it speaks to
>the sacrifice women make in bringing children into the world. Like most
>art, it is ambiguous. It's a shame that anyone is offended by art, whether
>it be good art or bad art. I believe that art is usually too vague to take
>that personally.
>Paul
>
>On Jul 13, 2004, at 11:47 AM, Bob Blakely wrote:
>
>>In fact, it was - .done (that is, portrayed by this artist) to my God who
>>is
>>my Father and my best friend.
>>
>>Regards,
>>Bob...
>>
>>From: "Amita Guha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>
>>
>>>>It brings great pain and sadness  to me (no, it's not the
>>>>nudity per se). It's as though this was done to one of my
>>>>parents, or perhaps my best friend.
>>>>
>>>>In fact, it was.
>>>
>>>Please explain.
>>
>




Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Jostein
- Original Message - 
From: "Cotty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
> >They have Great Tits in the UK.
> >
> >http://www.uksafari.com/greattits.htm
> 
> I honestly don't know where you've seen all these birds with disgraceful
> names. I certainly haven't seen any

To bring them down, you have to place wing nuts on the feeding tray.

> We did have a lone Red Raw Freshly Spanked Buttock at the feeder the
> other day, but it flew off when a pair of Large Breasts With Nipples The
> Size Of Scammell Wheel Nuts arrived after a particularly arduous flight
> from South Africa.

Yeah, they're stealin and robin all the time.


nietsoJ



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
Cotty,
I respect what you said.  I am not suggesting censorship.  I am suggesting 
self-sensorship.

I for one, believe in the right to free speech and free expression.  The 
obvious problem occurs when exercising ones rights to such trample on/or 
violates another perceived rights.

We all exercise a degree of self-censorship when we are about to say/write 
something and then have a second thought about how that might affect the 
recipient, or the recipient's view of ourselves.  I am simply suggesting we 
exercise that same thoughtfulness when it comes to presenting images.

Granted, these images are not imbedded in the PDML... and an individual has 
a choice...


Tom C.


From: Cotty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "pentax list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 18:47:48 +0100

On 13/7/04, Tom C, discombobulated, offered:
>1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
>2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What 
is
>OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did 
standards
>change?
>3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display of
>nudity put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed today.
>4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family.
>Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks 
down,
>families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay we see 
today
>in society as a whole.  How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual
>images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. 
Many,
>if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests 
and
>desires.
>5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't
>bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?

I take your point Tom, but what you are suggesting is censorship. Fine if
you were made to sit in front of your monitor and had to view the picture
in question, but the fact is that you don't, especially when the
photographer issues guidance with a warning. It was your choice to view
the images. There are those on this list who disagree with what you have
written above (and I may not necessarily be one), and what you are
suggesting leaves no option for them to view. The way the original poster
proceeded was fair and correct IMO.
With great respect,

Cheers,
  Cotty
___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Steve Desjardins
LOL.  I thought the thread needed more photographic content. ;-)

(Damn Spell Checker.  Why can't it know the word I want? ) 

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 07/13/04 01:07PM >>>
Steve Desjardins wrote:
> The cultural moires and/or taboos of the viewer are an essential part
of
> a photo.

But is there a pattern to it?



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Bob W
Hi,

> I honestly don't know where you've seen all these birds with disgraceful
> names. I certainly haven't seen any

> We did have a lone Red Raw Freshly Spanked Buttock at the feeder the
> other day,

I really did laugh out loud at that one!

It reminds me of the gag Steven Fry and Hugh Laurie used to do (it
doesn't work in writing):

"I was strolling through the fields and stopped to pick a buttercup -
why people leave buttocks lying around in fields is beyond me - ..."

-- 
Cheers,
 Bob



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread mike wilson
Steve Desjardins wrote:
The cultural moires and/or taboos of the viewer are an essential part of
a photo.
But is there a pattern to it?


Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Cotty
On 13/7/04, Tom C, discombobulated, offered:

>1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
>2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What is 
>OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did standards 
>change?
>3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display of 
>nudity put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed today.
>4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family. 
>Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks down, 
>families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay we see today 
>in society as a whole.  How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual 
>images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. Many, 
>if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests and 
>desires.
>5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't 
>bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?

I take your point Tom, but what you are suggesting is censorship. Fine if
you were made to sit in front of your monitor and had to view the picture
in question, but the fact is that you don't, especially when the
photographer issues guidance with a warning. It was your choice to view
the images. There are those on this list who disagree with what you have
written above (and I may not necessarily be one), and what you are
suggesting leaves no option for them to view. The way the original poster
proceeded was fair and correct IMO.

With great respect,




Cheers,
  Cotty


___/\__
||   (O)   | People, Places, Pastiche
||=|www.macads.co.uk/snaps
_




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Tom C
The problem I see with this whole thing is this...
1. We are constantly bombarded by images of sexuality in our society.
2. Morals have declined significantly in the past 100 or so years.  What is 
OK today was not OK yesterday.  Did it suddenly become OK or did standards 
change?
3. Forty/Fifty years ago the commonly held view of the public display of 
nudity put it around the same level as child pornography is viewed today.
4. The basic building block of civilization is the 'nuclear' family. 
Man/Woman/Child.  When commonly accepted standards of morality breaks down, 
families breakdown, civilization breaks down.  Hence the decay we see today 
in society as a whole.  How does this relate to sexual images?  Sexual 
images on the whole do not encourage loyalty to one's mate or family. Many, 
if not most, are designed to appeal to one's selfish prurient interests and 
desires.
5. Can't we have a forum for disussion about photography where we don't 
bombard each other with sexual images? Is that to much to ask?

As far as disparaging anyones god, a work that distorts and corrupts or 
disprects an idea/concept/belief that some consider as sacred, can certainly 
be called disparaging.

Tom C.


From: Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three 
shot series)
Date: Tue, 13 Jul 2004 13:02:48 -0400

I don't think the work disparages anyone's God. It simply applies the Last 
Supper as a metaphor. One can interpret in any number of ways. Perhaps it 
speaks to the dehumanizing of women as sex objects. Perhaps it speaks to 
the sacrifice women make in bringing children into the world. Like most 
art, it is ambiguous. It's a shame that anyone is offended by art, whether 
it be good art or bad art. I believe that art is usually too vague to take 
that personally.
Paul

On Jul 13, 2004, at 11:47 AM, Bob Blakely wrote:
In fact, it was - .done (that is, portrayed by this artist) to my God who 
is
my Father and my best friend.

Regards,
Bob...
From: "Amita Guha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

It brings great pain and sadness  to me (no, it's not the
nudity per se). It's as though this was done to one of my
parents, or perhaps my best friend.
In fact, it was.
Please explain.





Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread mike wilson
Sure you're not thinking of polititcians?
Daniel J. Matyola wrote:
But most of them are men.
mike wilson wrote:
More tits in the UK than anywhere else in the world..






Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Bob Blakely
HAR!

Regards,
Bob...

From: "Jens Bladt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


> It's interesting that the last supper apparently always takes place at
only
> three sides of the table - too make life easier for painters and
> photographers :-)



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Rob Studdert
On 13 Jul 2004 at 16:58, Dario Bonazza wrote:

> And Blue Tits too:
> http://www.naturephotographers.bramleyfrith.co.uk/separates/british/birds/bi
> rd02.htm

I hear they only come out in the cold?


Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Dario Bonazza
Rob Studdert wrote:

> They have Great Tits in the UK.
>
> http://www.uksafari.com/greattits.htm

And Blue Tits too:
http://www.naturephotographers.bramleyfrith.co.uk/separates/british/birds/bi
rd02.htm

Dario



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
If that's what you consider "great tits," Rob, you qualify as an 
honorary Brit!

Rob Studdert wrote:
They have Great Tits in the UK.
 




Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Rob Studdert
On 13 Jul 2004 at 9:14, Daniel J. Matyola wrote:

> But most of them are men.
> 
> mike wilson wrote:
> 
> > More tits in the UK than anywhere else in the world..

They have Great Tits in the UK.

http://www.uksafari.com/greattits.htm


Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Amita Guha
> It brings great pain and sadness  to me (no, it's not the 
> nudity per se). It's as though this was done to one of my 
> parents, or perhaps my best friend.
> 
> In fact, it was.

Please explain.
 
> The work reveals a lot about the artist, about his 
> willingness to cause pain to a multitude of people which is 
> about his character.

The artist, Renee Cox, is a woman. This interview with her is worth the
read.

http://archive.salon.com/sex/feature/2001/02/22/renee_cox/

Cox portrayed Jesus herself so that she wouldn’t exploit anyone. She was
raised Catholic, and she says that the piece was meant as a critique of
the Catholic church, because women hold no position in the church. She
also says she wanted to include African-Americans in these classic
scenarios. This piece was part of a series that includes the Pietà, Adam
and Eve and Michelangelo's David.

> You say "It made an impact on [you]." Please describe this impact.

It was moving to see Jesus portrayed as a woman. The fact that it was a
woman of color made it that much more striking. It gave new meaning to
the idea that God is in all of us. It was a very honest, confident
piece.




Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Steve Desjardins
Thanks for reposting them.  And kudos to everyone for a very civilized
discussion on a subject where overall agreement was unlikely.

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 07/13/04 07:15AM >>>
I don't see any of the three as an "American" version. The placement of

the one woman's hands on the other's breasts was  meant to be seen as 
yielding to temptation. It was not done as a coverup.  Thanks to all 
who commented on these pics and my apologies to anyone who was offended

by the pictures or the conversation. Remember, however, you weren't 
obliged to look, and you didn't  have to read the thread. I am now 
going to delete them from my Photo Net folder.
Paul

On Jul 13, 2004, at 6:41 AM, Steve Desjardins wrote:

> The cultural moires and/or taboos of the viewer are an essential part

> of
> a photo.   It may not be anything the photographer can control, but
> realistically it affects the perception of the photo far more than
> anything as simple as resolution does.
>
> OTOH, since the woman's breasts in the "American"version are covered
> with the other woman's hands, I doubt that this would appease any of

> the
> serious "objectors"  (wry grin).
>
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 07/12/04 02:47PM >>>
> Nice work, Paul!  Do the first two shots represent the "European"
and
> "American" versions?  I sometimes do a particular shot in a couple
of
> versions, keeping in mind who I expect will see them.
>
> Pat White
>
>



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-13 Thread Daniel J. Matyola
But most of them are men.
mike wilson wrote:
More tits in the UK than anywhere else in the world..




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Steve Desjardins
I had a similar reaction.  I do think it is well executed, in that I
could have just ignored it if it was badly done.  Bob said he felt
sadness, whereas I feel more of an uncomfortable confusion.  Either way
I found the quality of the photo hard to ignore.

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 07/12/04 11:54PM >>>
This is art and well done. It is indeed powerful, however...

It brings great pain and sadness  to me (no, it's not the nudity per
se).
It's as though this was done to one of my parents, or perhaps my best
friend.

In fact, it was.

The work reveals a lot about the artist, about his willingness to cause
pain
to a multitude of people which is about his character.

You say "It made an impact on [you]." Please describe this impact.

Regards,
Bob...
---
"No man's life, liberty or property is safe while the legislature is
in
session."
  -- Mark Twain


From: "Amita Guha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


> Hey Paul, interesting shots. By the way, have you ever seen "Yo
Mama's
> Last Supper" by Renee Cox? It was the life-sized photograph that was
> displayed at the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 2001. It caused quite a
flap
> because it depicted the Last Supper, with Jesus portrayed as a naked
> woman. I went to see it at the museum and I found it quite powerful.
I'm
> having trouble finding a decent-sized image of it online but here is
a
> small one. (Collin, this obviously isn't for you.)
>
> http://www.nerve.com/Photography/Cox/Shocking/viewimage.asp?num=4 
>
> Amita



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-13 Thread Bob Blakely
Hmmm.

Regards,
Bob...
---
"No man's life, liberty or property is safe while the legislature is in
session."
  -- Mark Twain


From: "Keith Whaley" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


> Bob Blakely wrote:
>
> > This is art and well done. It is indeed powerful, however...
> >
> > It brings great pain and sadness  to me (no, it's not the nudity per
se).
> > It's as though this was done to one of my parents, or perhaps my best
> > friend.
> >
> > In fact, it was.
>
> That line is just obscure enough to make no sense at all.
>
> keith whaley
>
> > The work reveals a lot about the artist, about his willingness to cause
pain
> > to a multitude of people which is about his character.
> >
> > You say "It made an impact on [you]." Please describe this impact.
> >
> > Regards,
> > Bob...
> > ---
>
>
> > From: "Amita Guha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >
> >
> >>Hey Paul, interesting shots. By the way, have you ever seen "Yo Mama's
> >>Last Supper" by Renee Cox? It was the life-sized photograph that was
> >>displayed at the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 2001. It caused quite a flap
> >>because it depicted the Last Supper, with Jesus portrayed as a naked
> >>woman. I went to see it at the museum and I found it quite powerful. I'm
> >>having trouble finding a decent-sized image of it online but here is a
> >>small one. (Collin, this obviously isn't for you.)
> >>
> >>http://www.nerve.com/Photography/Cox/Shocking/viewimage.asp?num=4
> >>
> >>Amita
>
>
>
>



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Bob Blakely
This is art and well done. It is indeed powerful, however...

It brings great pain and sadness  to me (no, it's not the nudity per se).
It's as though this was done to one of my parents, or perhaps my best
friend.

In fact, it was.

The work reveals a lot about the artist, about his willingness to cause pain
to a multitude of people which is about his character.

You say "It made an impact on [you]." Please describe this impact.

Regards,
Bob...
---
"No man's life, liberty or property is safe while the legislature is in
session."
  -- Mark Twain


From: "Amita Guha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


> Hey Paul, interesting shots. By the way, have you ever seen "Yo Mama's
> Last Supper" by Renee Cox? It was the life-sized photograph that was
> displayed at the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 2001. It caused quite a flap
> because it depicted the Last Supper, with Jesus portrayed as a naked
> woman. I went to see it at the museum and I found it quite powerful. I'm
> having trouble finding a decent-sized image of it online but here is a
> small one. (Collin, this obviously isn't for you.)
>
> http://www.nerve.com/Photography/Cox/Shocking/viewimage.asp?num=4
>
> Amita



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Paul Stenquist
Jeeez! I'm not getting Collin's posts, and I'm obviously I'm missing 
some good stuff. I'm not being facetious here. I enjoy divergent points 
of view, and Collin has proven himself to be a gentleman. I don't have 
him blocked (or anyone else for that matter). I don't know why I keep 
missing his posts, but I'd sure like to see this one. Why am I not 
receiving???
Paul
On Jul 12, 2004, at 10:04 PM, Pat White wrote:

Collin (spelled your name right this time), the news of Renaissance art
being used to assault the Catholic Church is a new one on me.  Do you 
know
of any links to sites where I might learn more about this?  Just 
curious.
Thanks.

Pat White




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Pat White
Collin (spelled your name right this time), the news of Renaissance art
being used to assault the Catholic Church is a new one on me.  Do you know
of any links to sites where I might learn more about this?  Just curious.
Thanks.

Pat White




Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Pat White
Well, Paul, your pictures certainly provoked some discussion!  Hmm, isn't
that what art is meant to do?  Also, you raise a valid point about religious
art often depicting nudity.

However, many people feel that a painting may be art, but a photo of the
same subject is porn, sort of like the old "art is in b&w, porn is in color"
way of thinking.

As for religious art, well, most of the saints aren't around, so there's not
much religious photography.  Besides, getting miracles on film could be
quite a challenge for even the best photographer.

And to Colin:  temptation has been depicted in many ways.  I've seen a
version of The Temptation of Saint Anthony that was pretty erotic, featuring
a vision of a row of nude females, seen from a low angle.  I could well
imagine the good saint feeling tempted.

To sum up, though, Paul's images were mildly sensual, definitely not porn,
and I don't think they served to trivialize the concept of their title.

Pat White




RE: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Amita Guha
I like the shapes he makes with the bodies. They are interesting from a
sort of abstract, design perspective. The concept of human bodies as
paint is kind of interesting. I agree, I wouldn't want to lie down on a
cold pavement with no clothes on, but there are lots of things I
wouldn't do that lots of people enjoy. Maybe these people want to be
immortalized in a famous photograph. Who knows. I saw a documentary on
Tunick's work recently and I found it knd of interesting. Moreso than
someone like Wegman or Geddes, for instance, although I guess Tunick is
just as commercial as they are.

> -Original Message-
> From: Paul Stenquist [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Monday, July 12, 2004 8:38 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, 
> the three shot series)
> 
> 
> I think Spencer Tunick's photos are more about scale than art. It's a 
> feat of organization to get all those people in one place at the same 
> time without their clothes.
> But most of the images seem ordinary to me. I guess my 
> favorite is the 
> one that looks like a field of sheep. It's metaphorical and has some 
> elementary beauty to it,
> but I find the majority of the work to be dull.
> paul
> On Jul 12, 2004, at 6:46 PM, Amita Guha wrote:
> 
> >> to me that seems like a very lazy, easy-target piece of work. Not 
> >> shocking at all, but the sort of thing a 16-year-old might 
> think was 
> >> clever.
> >
> > Then you must not like Spencer Tunick's work at all... 
> > http://spencertunick.com/
> >
> > Amita (no, I'm not fixated on nekkid people, I'm just bored 
> with work)
> >
> 



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Paul Stenquist
I think Spencer Tunick's photos are more about scale than art. It's a 
feat of organization to get all those people in one place at the same 
time without their clothes.
But most of the images seem ordinary to me. I guess my favorite is the 
one that looks like a field of sheep. It's metaphorical and has some 
elementary beauty to it,
but I find the majority of the work to be dull.
paul
On Jul 12, 2004, at 6:46 PM, Amita Guha wrote:

to me that seems like a very lazy, easy-target piece of work.
Not shocking at all, but the sort of thing a 16-year-old
might think was clever.
Then you must not like Spencer Tunick's work at all...
http://spencertunick.com/
Amita (no, I'm not fixated on nekkid people, I'm just bored with work)



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Rob Studdert
On 13 Jul 2004 at 0:18, Bob W wrote:

> > His work just shows how stupid some people can be (sorry if there are any
> > participants here). What else could you call someone who could be persuaded to
> > lie on the earth/asphalt in the rain/cold without their gear on and have
> > photos taken of them in order to make money/fame for someone else?
> 
> What, like this you mean?  (Warning, Will Robsinson! Danger! Female
> upper body approaching!)
> 
> http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/botticelli/venus/venus.jpg

I've no problem with models or modeling as long as there is acknowledgement 
and/or profit sharing for the models and that they aren't degraded in the 
process. I saw a video documentary of when the Tunick man shot in Melbourne, it 
was wet, cold and dingy and the participants were clearly not comfortable, yet 
it didn't seem to bother him (in a warm jacket of course) or them. Hence my 
initial comment about how stupid some people can be.

BTW I have a real problem with the Afghan Girl pic and worse the fact that he 
went back for another dip at the trough, as far I I'm aware she's still no 
better off even after all it's done for them (McCurry and NG).

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/03/0311_020312_sharbat.html


Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~distudio/publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Bob W
Hi,

>>
>> Then you must not like Spencer Tunick's work at all...
>> http://spencertunick.com/

> His work just shows how stupid some people can be (sorry if there are any
> participants here). What else could you call someone who could be persuaded to
> lie on the earth/asphalt in the rain/cold without their gear on and have photos
> taken of them in order to make money/fame for someone else?

What, like this you mean?  (Warning, Will Robsinson! Danger! Female
upper body approaching!)

http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/botticelli/venus/venus.jpg

:o)

-- 
Cheers,
 Bob



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Bob W
Hi,

Monday, July 12, 2004, 11:36:13 PM, Amita wrote:

>> to me that seems like a very lazy, easy-target piece of work. 
>> Not shocking at all, but the sort of thing a 16-year-old 
>> might think was clever.

> Heh...the local Catholics and mayor Guilianni sure thought it was
> shocking.

that's what makes it such a lazy piece of work. These people have
their hot buttons primed and ready to fire on a hair trigger. It's
like ringing a door bell and running away while they shake their fist
at you.

-- 
Cheers,
 Bob



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Bob W
Hi,

> Then you must not like Spencer Tunick's work at all...
> http://spencertunick.com/

on the contrary - I rather like it - it's very intersting. He did a
photograph a couple of years ago at Selfridges, a department store
in London where I used to work. Several people in it that I recognise...

> Amita (no, I'm not fixated on nekkid people, I'm just bored with work)

It's ok. You're allowed to be both.

-- 
Cheers,
 Bob



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-12 Thread Paul Stenquist
Sure Steve. But once again I must add -- at the risk of being redundant 
-- these pictures show bare breasts and are of a suggestive nature.
If you are offended by nudity, biblical allusions, or rosey pink 
background paper, please don't look.

Part One: http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=2519012
Part Two: http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=2517097
Part Three: http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=2519027
On Jul 12, 2004, at 4:22 PM, Steve Desjardins wrote:
Steve wrote:
Paul,
I was only able to see one of the shots (two women, one apple, one
knife)  Could I have the URL for the other two?



Re: civil discourse (was Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series)

2004-07-12 Thread Paul Stenquist
On Jul 12, 2004, at 3:37 PM, Bob W wrote:
. I'm trying to keep medieval prejudice and ignorance out of my house.
--
Cheers,
 Bob
Your wisdom once again made me smile, Bob. Thanks, I needed that.
We all have our own devils, don't we?
And if another man's friend happens to be our devil, I guess we just 
have to just pay him no heed.
Paul



Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-12 Thread John Forbes
There is an alternative.
Grand Teton is just another way of saying Big Tit, so why not call it  
..  Well, I'll leave it to you.  Don't wish to offend.

John
On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 22:08:48 +0100, Bob W <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
Monday, July 12, 2004, 9:45:47 PM, John wrote:
In Scotland, by Loch Leven, is a beautifully shaped mountain called the
"Pap of Glencoe".  I won't attach a pic lest it offends anyone.
the Americans have an entire national park called Grand Teton.
Good job so few of them speak French - they'd have to change its name to
Enormous Female Upper Body Part.

--
Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/


Re: PAW: Temptation of Eve, the three shot series

2004-07-12 Thread Bob W
Hi,

Monday, July 12, 2004, 9:45:47 PM, John wrote:

> In Scotland, by Loch Leven, is a beautifully shaped mountain called the
> "Pap of Glencoe".  I won't attach a pic lest it offends anyone.

the Americans have an entire national park called Grand Teton.

Good job so few of them speak French - they'd have to change its name to
Enormous Female Upper Body Part.

-- 
Cheers,
 Bob



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