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Nude visitors looks at the laserchrome prints 'Shepherd Boy' (L) and 'Jason' by Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset at the art exhibition 'Naked Men' at Leopold museum in Vienna. REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader |
The exhibit in Vienna's Leopold Museum is entitled "Naked
Men", so a group of nudists and naturalists took the curators
at their word and showed up to see it in the buff.
"It is good to be free, I am seeing this exhibition for the
second time now and it is perfect to see 'Naked Men' as a
naked man," said one of the visitors who called himself Max
and who on his previous visit wore his clothes.
The exhibition, which has been extended until March 4, is
designed to show the diverse and changing depictions of male
nudity in art history.
Among its exhibits is a grotesque self-portrait by Egon
Schiele and a photograph by French artists Pierre &
Gilles called "Vive La France" of three men of different
races wearing nothing but blue, white and red socks and
soccer boots.
Outrage from parents and religious groups in October forced
the Leopold to cover up the private parts of the three nude
male soccer players used on large publicity posters around
Vienna.
But "Naked Men" helped boost visitor numbers at the museum by
17 percent to more than 364,000 last year.
The museum - named for Austrian collector Rudolf Leopold -
was inspired to invite the public to get naked to see the
exhibition after an inquiry from a group of German nudists.
Around 250 viewers of various ages and nationalities attended
the special showing.
"It is a great story to tell my friends," said Luc, a student
from France who, like most people interviewed, declined to
give his surname or to be photographed.
"This is my first time doing this naked, I thought it is time
to make some nonsense."
However, not everyone thought it was all that special.
"I don't understand what the big fuss is about," said Moritz,
from Germany. "Everyone has seen real naked men before."
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