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South Australian police raid bookshop and seize Mapplethorpe's
Pictures
By Richard Phillips
19 January 2001
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this version to print
In a serious attack on democratic rights, two South Australian
plain-clothes detectives raided an Adelaide bookshop on January
7 and seized a copy of Pictures, a book by the internationally
renowned photographer Robert Mapplethorpe.
Police told Penelope Curtin, the owner of Folio Foliage bookshop
and a former literature officer for the state's Department of
Arts, that they had received an anonymous telephone call to Crime
Stoppers claiming that the shop was selling a book containing
child pornography. Unable to find the alleged booka collection
of works by Jock Sturgess published by the Museum of Modern Art
in Frankfurtthe officers looked around the shop and decided
to impound Mapplethorpe's Pictures.
As Curtin told the media: I was trying to be helpful.
Then they [the police] said: What if a child was to see
this?' I explained that I have never had a child in the shop and
the book was on the top shelf with only the spine showing.
The detectives told Curtin they were impounding the book and
would seek advice as to whether it breached Australian
censorship laws. Senior Constable Rod Huppatz, one of the detectives
involved in the raid, later admitted to the press that he had
not heard of Mapplethorpe before but said the book was in a public
place. We need to determine whether it should or shouldn't
be there.
Mapplethorpe, who died in 1989 aged 43, is regarded by many
as one of the most important American photographers to emerge
in the 1970s. After studying at the Pratt Institute of Art in
New York, he developed an interest in photography and held his
first one-man show in 1977. He won notoriety for his homoerotic
and sado-masochistic photographs in the late-1970s and held critically
acclaimed exhibitions in Corcoran Gallery, Washington D.C. (1978),
the Musee National d'Art Moderne in Paris (1983), and the Whitney
Museum in New York (1988). Generally favouring large format cameras,
his range of work includes celebrity portraits, nudes and still
life close-ups of flowers.
Mapplethorpe's photographs are freely available in Australian
bookstores and can be viewed in extensive collections of his work
at Australian art museums and galleries. The National Gallery
of Australia in Canberra has more than 40 of his photographs,
several state galleries have collections, and four exhibitions
of his works have been held in Sydney over the last six years.
South Australian bookstore owners, artists and writers condemned
the raid. Julie Robinson, Art Gallery of South Australia's curator
of prints, drawings and photographs, described it as petty
and an over-reaction. Samela Harris, whose father
Max, was a well-known writer and campaigner against Australia's
repressive censorship laws in the 1940s, 50s and 60s, described
the raid as scandalous and a regressive start
to a new millennium in a comment published in the Adelaide
Advertiser. James Crump from Arena Editions in the US, the
publisher of Pictures, told the press that South Australia's
police had created a world first in seizing the book and described
the raid as an outrage and tantamount to fascism.
John White, South Australia's assistant police commissioner
responded to these statements by defending the police and stating
that the book was confiscated because officers believed some of
the photographs could be within the ambit of a restricted
publication.
Rob Lucas, acting Attorney General for South Australia's conservative
Liberal Party government, wrote to Curtin last Tuesday declaring
that it was up to police when they returned the book and that
he would not interfere in their investigations. Lucas said police
could hold the book for up to two years depending on whether they
decided to prosecute the bookshop owner.
Police forwarded the book to the Office of Literature and Film
Classification, Australia's censorship body, which resolved on
Thursday that the book could be sold without restrictions. Despite
this ruling, under South Australia's Summary Offenses Act police
can seize material they deem to be indecent or offensive. Those
prosecuted under this law can be fined up to $20,000 or face two
years prison.
The Socialist Equality Party condemns this blatant act of censorship
by the South Australian police. The police decision to seize the
Mapplethorpe book and take upon themselves the role of moral guardians
is an ominous development. It follows a series of attacks on freedom
of artistic expression instigated by extreme rightwing elements
over the last four years, demanding a stricter censorship code
in Australia.
In October 1997, the National Gallery of Victoria closed down
an exhibition by American photographer Andres Serrano, whose photograph
Piss Christ became the target for physical and verbal
attacks by Christian fundamentalists. In 1998 two films were bannedPasolini's
Salo and the documentary Sick: The life and death of
Bob FlanaganSupermasochist. And in 1999 Canberra's National
Gallery of Australia cancelled Sensation, an exhibition
of British artists, after management held discussions with federal
Arts Minister Richard Alston.
While Adelaide is the home of many artists and writers and
the site of one of Australia's most prestigious arts festivals,
it is also the base of Trish Draper, Liberal federal MP and leading
member of the Lyons Forum, a pro-censorship lobby group within
the Howard government with links to Christian fundamentalist groupings.
In 1996 Draper campaigned to stop Salo being screened
in Adelaide and in January 1997 called on the government to establish
a Royal Commission into paedophile activity. In 1999 she attempted
to have Lolita, Adrian Lyne's film adaptation of the Vladimir
Nabakov novel, banned. She declared that the film encouraged paedophilia,
even before she had seen the movie. Draper regards Playboy
magazine as pornographic and has demanded the government stop
all X-rated videos.
See Also:
The banning and unbanning
in Australia of the new French film Romance
[11 February 2000]
National Gallery of
Australia cancels Sensation exhibition
[29 December 1999]
A mature film about
sexual obsession
Review of Lolita, directed by Adrian Lyne
[9 April 1999]
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