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Thirty-two kilos

9 January 2009 3 Comments

I don’t even remember how I ran across this article today: Pro-anorexia websites inspire controversial photo exhibit

A controversial new photo exhibits opens tonight in Washington D.C. that has many people grimacing in disgust. The exhibit features a collection of work by German photographer Ivonne Thein and is titled ‘Thirty-Two Kilos.’ If your math is rusty, thirty-two kilos is roughly seventy pounds. Why is that important? The collection of photographs features extremely emaciated models.

I really think the only unique part about this exhibit is the title (while very sick, it is at least creative).  But as for the rest of it?  I don’t see what’s so special….

  1. It’s a “collection of photographs [that] features extremely emaciated models.”  …and that’s new how?  I walked by Victoria Secrets this evening and found the same.
  2. “None of the models are truly that thin.  They were digitally manipulated to look anorexic.”  Right, I bet 95% of all magazine photos out there are Photoshopped.  Heck, I know how to Photoshop photos!
  3. “…a few pro-anorexia sites are rather fond of Thein’s latest work.”  Well yeah, these are photos of emaciated women!  I swear, you could put up pictures of underweight animals and they would reappear on some pro-ana site.

I guess what irks me a little bit about this exhibit is Thein’s intention to raise awareness about eating disorders and alarm about pro-ana websites.  I feel like putting out another exhibit of sick girls just feeds the disorder and the obsession with thinness.  While maybe she meant for the models to look so ridiculously thin that no one would want to look like that… to someone with a serious eating disorder, he/she is going to look at those photos and find something attractive about them.  I’m sure that she doesn’t think she is glamorizing anorexia… but the only people she is scaring are those who do not have eating disorders.  Plus, she’s perpetuating the stereotype that someone with an eating disorder weighs thirty-two kilos (when most fall into the EDNOS category).

I just hate to see media like this in the name of “eating disorder awareness.”  That might be true… but it’s the wrong kind of awareness.

3 Comments »

  • imaginenamaste said:

    Hello!

    I had the exact same thoughts about that exhibit….that it was a good message that maynot have been done in the best way….I was curious about the exhibit and the article I read had a link to the website…I really wonder how many of those pictures are going to wind-up on the pro-eating disorder websites and “inspire” people?

  • eshoe said:

    Yeah….looking at the photos encouraged my ed to no ends.

  • sarah said:

    I don’t know whether I feel really good or really awful about the fact that I live so close to DC and didn’t even know about the exhibit. It’s not that I find it outrageous in quite the same way that I did years back when someone was talking about how they wrote a book about their eating disorder to help others understand what was involved and “didn’t put in any tips at all” but even skimming it, I could find plenty of ways to infer the best way to lose.

    What I will say about it beyond that, however, is that with everything that is going on in the district and the millions of people from around the country/world that are expected to descend within the next couple of days, there is a chance that it could do a lot of good.

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