Edmonton

$170M Modigliani painting too hot to handle for some media

Modigliani's Reclining Nude may have fetched $170 million at auction, but it's the subject matter that proved too much for some media outlets who felt it necessary to blur or block out body parts.

Several media outlets censored photos of painting by blurring out body parts

Modigliani's "Reclining Nude" and the debate of censorship and artistic freedom

9 years ago
Duration 2:33
Front Gallery owner Rachel Bouchard talks with Mark Connolly on Edmonton AM about the social impact of Amedeo Modigliani's "Reclining Nude" and the censorship surrounding the painting.

This week, Reclining Nude, Italian artist Amedeo Modigliani's painting depicting a nude model reclining on a crimson couch, fetched $170.4 million US at a New York auction, the second-highest price ever paid for a work of art at an auction.

For some media outlets the subject matter of the painting was obscene, rather than the price. The amount paid was only second to the $179 million paid in May for Picasso's Women of Algiers (Version O).

Several media outlets censored photos of the painting by blurring out body parts or covering them with black boxes.

"I think it's crazy," Rachel Bouchard, owner of The Front Gallery in Edmonton, told Edmonton AM's Mark Connolly Wednesday. "It's mostly because of her position."

The painting was done during the First World War, and Modigliani was using the beauty of the figure to counter the ugliness of the war, Bouchard said. 

You can hear more of what Bouchard had to say in the video.