Australian newspaper defend its right to call Crumb a pervert
Amplify’d from www.dailytelegraph.com.au
The Robert Crumb controversy: What happened to freedom of speech?
For artists, it's the ancient tale. Picasso was regarded as a dirty old perv by politicians. aacÉdouard Manet was pilloried for his casually erotic nudes. Francisco de Goya, Caravaggio, Andy Warhol, Tracey Emin: they all felt the heat.
Crumb's 'rape fantasy' cartoons are, actually, often about strong women turning the tables on men: one victim terrifies an attacker by leaping into a crazily sexy pose.
Most 15-year-old boys you know would find it hilarious and titillating, along with Crumb's gags about farts.
Rape victims - and women generally - are probably less likely to appreciate the joke.
This is the principal occupational hazard of art: not everybody is going to like it. Crumb might be tartly honest about his youthful screwed-upness, but he doesn't pretend to be surprised when people object to the notion of women as vaginas-on-legs or his depictions of African Americans as big-lipped golliwogs. He set out to shock.
Read more at www.dailytelegraph.com.auFunny, I thought civilisation was about everyone being allowed to have a say. I don't think anyone wants to hurt Crumb. But plenty of people want to express a view about his work. Some of them don't like it. Is that so shocking?
See this Amp at http://amplify.com/u/a1cjxx