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"Warp" <war### [at] tagpovrayorg> wrote...
> Just think about a similar case: The fact that some people really hate
> religious pictures doesn't mean that they should be banned or even that
those
> people should rant about them (they usually don't because they respect
> other people's views).
Actually, I got a couple of private rants from a Christian-themed image I
submitted to the IRTC a few years ago.
Also, I think a lot of people usually keep their rants about nudity in the
IRTC to themselves, too. I, for one, would rather have had Gilles clothe
the subjects in his art (at least with a bathrobe or towel or something). I
think nudity (even artistic nudity) is inappropriate for some people to
view, which means that the audience for IRTC is now limited. (I should note
that I consider Gilles work to be tasteful art, not pornography. Yet it is
still not appropriate for all audiences.)
Personally, I think it would be a good idea to have a disclaimer or
something on the front page letting people know that computer-generated (yet
lifelike) nudity is visible on the site. Also, I would love it if the IRTC
could provide a filtered version of the site which does not contain
thumbnails of or links to the images that show nudity.
-Nathan
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Nathan Kopp wrote:
> Also, I think a lot of people usually keep their rants about nudity in the
> IRTC to themselves, too. I, for one, would rather have had Gilles clothe
> the subjects in his art (at least with a bathrobe or towel or something). I
> think nudity (even artistic nudity) is inappropriate for some people to
> view, which means that the audience for IRTC is now limited. (I should note
> that I consider Gilles work to be tasteful art, not pornography. Yet it is
> still not appropriate for all audiences.)
>
> Personally, I think it would be a good idea to have a disclaimer or
> something on the front page letting people know that computer-generated (yet
> lifelike) nudity is visible on the site. Also, I would love it if the IRTC
> could provide a filtered version of the site which does not contain
> thumbnails of or links to the images that show nudity.
>
> -Nathan
I agree with theses sentiments wholeheartedly.
On another note, hasn't anyone picked up on the fact that the man is
clothed and the woman isn't? That sounds like a contrast to me!
--
Francois Labreque | And a four year old carelessly banging on a toy
flabreque | piano is not only 'music', it's probably the last
@ | moment of 'artistic purity' they'll ever enjoy
videotron.ca | before outside influences start corrupting their
| expression. - Chris R.
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Nathan Kopp <nat### [at] koppcom> wrote:
: Also, I would love it if the IRTC
: could provide a filtered version of the site which does not contain
: thumbnails of or links to the images that show nudity.
Or perhaps some "censored" versions could be used as an option. By censored
I mean that some critical parts of the image are blurred or a mosaic filter
(with rather big tiles) is applied, as it's done in some television programs.
(I'm not too serious about this proposition; just an idea :) )
--
char*i="b[7FK@`3NB6>B:b3O6>:B:b3O6><`3:;8:6f733:>::b?7B>:>^B>C73;S1";
main(_,c,m){for(m=32;c=*i++-49;c&m?puts(""):m)for(_=(
c/4)&7;putchar(m),_--?m:(_=(1<<(c&3))-1,(m^=3)&3););} /*- Warp -*/
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Greg M. Johnson <gre### [at] my-dejanewscom> wrote:
: 1) David is correct that anything that makes one lust in one's heart is
: considered sin in the bible, from Job 31 to Jesus' Sermon on the Mount. Sin
: can get you into __________.
In the current world it's very difficult to not to see nudity or even
half-nudity almost everywhere. Commercial adds in television, magazines, etc.
are the most obvious example.
If seeing nudity is a problem for oneself, usually you learn to just skip
those type of images.
I don't think the IRTC is so different from those. Nudity as art is extremely
common in artistic works, so one should expect to sometimes see it. If it's
a problem, then one has to just skip those images.
Starting to rant about them in a loud voice is like going to an art museum
and start to yell that all those nude statues and paintings should be banned.
--
char*i="b[7FK@`3NB6>B:b3O6>:B:b3O6><`3:;8:6f733:>::b?7B>:>^B>C73;S1";
main(_,c,m){for(m=32;c=*i++-49;c&m?puts(""):m)for(_=(
c/4)&7;putchar(m),_--?m:(_=(1<<(c&3))-1,(m^=3)&3););} /*- Warp -*/
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Nathan Kopp wrote:
> I, for one, would rather have had Gilles clothe
> the subjects in his art (at least with a bathrobe or towel or something).
In a strict biblical sense, images of a woman in a bathrobe might engender just
as much sinful lust (Job 31, Matt 5 ) in piquing the imagination as a nude
figure. As I said before, even Condoleeza Rice's professional attire inspired
mind-numbing lust in Ariel Sharon. If one is looking to the outside world to
protect oneself from sinful thoughts, you're in trouble.
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I don't think I started "a rant"! You seem to be talking more then I am!
______
David McCabe
mcc### [at] yahoocom
http://homepage.mac.com/davidmccabe/
Jesus loves you!
> Starting to rant about them in a loud voice is like going to an art museum
> and start to yell that all those nude statues and paintings should be banned.
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Warp <war### [at] tagpovrayorg> wrote:
> Nathan Kopp <nat### [at] koppcom> wrote:
> : Also, I would love it if the IRTC
> : could provide a filtered version of the site which does not contain
> : thumbnails of or links to the images that show nudity.
> Or perhaps some "censored" versions could be used as an option. By censored
> I mean that some critical parts of the image are blurred or a mosaic filter
> (with rather big tiles) is applied, as it's done in some television programs.
> (I'm not too serious about this proposition; just an idea :) )
Well, thankfullly (if you think viewing naked robots is sinful), Jon Van
Sickles did so already for his one Rusty Animation. ;)
Geoff
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"Warp" <war### [at] tagpovrayorg> wrote in message
news:3a9cf5c8@news.povray.org...
> Greg M. Johnson <gre### [at] my-dejanewscom> wrote:
> In the current world it's very difficult to not to see nudity or even
> half-nudity almost everywhere. Commercial adds in television, magazines,
etc.
> are the most obvious example.
Does that make it acceptable?
I don't mean to come across as an ultra-conservative freak, I'm just
questioning your logic here. Does the fact that something is prevalent in
our society make it _right_? From a personal point of view, I disagree with
nudity in art (and I think clothing, even a bathrobe, would have made the
picture perfectly acceptable), though I do agree that this particular image
is art and not pornography (and better done than most uses of nudity). Just
because I disagree with the author does not mean I don't believe it's art, I
just think that I would prefer the image in a slightly different form. Of
course, that's my personal opinion, and everyone else is under no obligation
to accept it.
...Chambers
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Ben Chambers <bdc### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
: Does that make it acceptable?
I consider raytracing to be more "pure art" than commercial adds, so in
my opinion nudity as art in raytracing is even more acceptable than nudity
in commercial adds.
My point wasn't whether it is or it isn't acceptable from the point of view
of some people. My point was that since it's widely regarded as acceptable,
the best thing you can do is to live with that. If you don't like that kind
of pictures, then just don't watch them.
Of course this is also a cultural thing. In some countries nudity is more
normal than in others.
However, most art is considered universal, and nudity is an essential part
of art.
--
char*i="b[7FK@`3NB6>B:b3O6>:B:b3O6><`3:;8:6f733:>::b?7B>:>^B>C73;S1";
main(_,c,m){for(m=32;c=*i++-49;c&m?puts(""):m)for(_=(
c/4)&7;putchar(m),_--?m:(_=(1<<(c&3))-1,(m^=3)&3););} /*- Warp -*/
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Warp wrote:
>
> Ben Chambers <bdc### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> : Does that make it acceptable?
>
> I consider raytracing to be more "pure art" than commercial adds, so in
> my opinion nudity as art in raytracing is even more acceptable than nudity
> in commercial adds.
That depends on the context in both cases.
A woman wearing only underwear in Victoria's secrets ads is fine with me
since this is what the company is selling; however the Doritos ad where
a fully-clothed, but very sexy gal walks into a library and is sooo hot
that the sprinkler system starts is wrong by my standards.
The same goes for art. The nudes in Gilles' pictures are usually in a
context where one might expect some flesh, whereas most sci-fi or
Dungeon & Dragon-type pics have the very nasty tendencies of showing
female characters wearing only chain-mail bikinis and similar apparels
which do not make much sense, in my opinion.
--
Francois Labreque | And a four year old carelessly banging on a toy
flabreque | piano is not only 'music', it's probably the last
@ | moment of 'artistic purity' they'll ever enjoy
videotron.ca | before outside influences start corrupting their
| expression. - Chris R.
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