Museums Join OnlyFans To Keep ‘Explicit’ Art From Social Media Censors

Museums have found a clever way to circumvent censorship on more explicit artworks: OnlyFans. Amid increased social media crackdowns on risqué museum imagery, Vienna, Austria’s tourism board has created “Vienna Strips on OnlyFans.” Art enthusiasts can view a collection of randy works by Egon Schiele, Amedeo Modigliani and other artists whose works were previously banned on social media.

Meanwhile, those who subscribe early to the “ViennaTouristBoard” OnlyFans can get a free ticket to view the racy pieces “in the flesh” at one of the city’s museums. The migration to the XXX site is a reaction to social media crackdowns on museum accounts, which saw Vienna’s Albertina museum’s TikTok suspended and eventually banned for showcasing art by Nobuyoshi Araki, whose photographs often depict nude women. Vienna’s tourism board hopes that moving explicit art content to OnlyFans will ultimately help “start a conversation” about the problems with social media censorship.

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Check out more about museums joining OnlyFans to avoid social media censorship: https://nypost.com/2021/10/21/museums-join-onlyfans-to-keep-explicit-art-from-being-censored/

Japanese Museum Displays Centuries-Old Controversial Erotic Art

A shunga print. Photograph: Geoffrey Clements/CorbisDespite Japan’s eclectic and hugely popular porn industry, many of its citizens are still prudes when it comes to the country’s rich history with erotic art, or shunga. 133 centuries-old original shunga prints, which mix graphic depictions of sex with visual humor, were rejected by 10 museums before finally finding a home at a little gallery. The woodblock prints are definitely shocking: they are of couples, and groups, in the midst of sexual ecstasy, though they’re often depicted in humorous and satirical ways. Voyeurism and orgies are recurring themes in the art, with women and men in various contorted sexual positions, their kimonos loosened or discarded.

Created in the 17th century and eventually banned for being “obscene,” the works depict all manner of sexual escapades taking place in brothels, teahouses, inns, and even Buddhist temples. But most shocking is not the images themselves (the most famous one called “the Dream of the Fisherman’s Wife,” which depicts a woman being pleasured by two octopuses), but that so many Japanese who love porn and manga wouldn’t want to see what’s being billed as “the original shunga.” Thankfully, not everyone is so prudish: over 9,000 people have gone to see the erotic works. The museum director said, “I hope they will feel a sense of discovery and re-connection with something important that has been missing from the way the cultural history of Japan has been presented until now.”

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Check out more about Japan’s centuries-old erotic art here.