Tuesday 25 June 2013

Arne Svenson: An Intrusion into Privacy


If you are a New Yorker, you might have heard of the controversy surrounding Arne Svenson. A celebrated photographer specializing in people portraits and an uncanny eye for quirk, his latest collection entitled ‘The Neighbours’ has landed him into a legal soup.

The collection is a series of shots taken of the apartments opposite Svenson’s Tribecca home in 2012. The shots were taken secretly with Svenson’s zoom lenses. They capture mundane but intimate moments of modern domestic life, and each image is now up for sale at prices ranging around USD $7,500.
 
 

 
Needless to say, the collection has been seen as a breach of privacy. Although the shots have been cleverly taken (as a form of art) and disguise the subject’s actual identity, Svenson is facing a lawsuit from Martha and Matthew Foster who claim certain shots of their young children “are clearly recognizable” and pose a danger to their safety.

Svenson’s response to this was “For my subjects, there is no question of privacy. The neighbours don’t know they are being photographed; I carefully shoot from the shadows of my home into theirs.” If I was in his neighbours’ shoes, I’d find this comment infuriating. It’s one thing that space-starved New Yorkers know better than to expect privacy in their glass-and-steel residential boxes, but it’s a completely different ball-game when your daily duties are printed and posted as sellable art for the world to see.

Svenson’s lawyer is looking for solace under the First Amendment of Rights that gives artists a freedom of expression, thereby making such actions legal. But what about the subjects in question? It is a heated debate.

We have read of controversies surrounding celebrities who yearn for privacy. They say it’s the price they have to pay for fame. Now everyday people are entering the same mess. Would you appreciate finding an image of yourself cleaning the toilet (even if your face cannot be seen), and read it’s a hot-seller in a glorified art gallery? Rather disturbing I’d say. Keep the curtains down and beware of artsy neighbours!
- Big Sis.

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