Frederic Durand-Baissas, a primary school teacher in Paris, has sued the powerful social network in French court, claiming Facebook violated his freedom of speech by abruptly removing his profile.
Durand-Baissas' account was suspended hours after he posted a photo of Gustave Courbet’s "The Origin of the World," a painting that depicts female genitalia. He claimed that its status as a cherished work of art did not stop Facebook from shutting down his account because of its ban on nude images. He accuses Facebook of deactivating his account "without warning or justification" in February 2011.
He promptly sued the company in the name of freedom of expression, but the case came to court only after years of legal wrangling over jurisdiction.
But at least, Facebook made rule changes in 2015 clarifying that depictions of nudity in artwork were acceptable.
Left: Caricature of Etienne Carjat "Gustave Courbet", published in the newspaper Le Boulevard on June 7, 1863. National Library of France. Source: arzamas. academy
His lawyer Stephane Cottineau had previously acknowledged that Facebook banned nude content at the time, but argued that the painting was a "major work" which is "part of France’s cultural heritage".
The Musee d’Orsay, which has held the painting since 1995, says on its website that the work "escapes pornographic status" thanks to "Courbet's great virtuosity and the refinement of his amber colour scheme".
And if in 1866, when it was painted, neither genitalia, nor opinions about them were on display, today anyone can take part in the debate.
At the time Courbet was working on the painting his favourite model was a young woman, Joanna Hiffernan, also known as Jo.
The commission for L’Origine du monde is believed to have come from Khalil Bey, an Ottoman diplomat, former ambassador of the Ottoman Empire in Athens and Saint Petersburg who had just moved to Paris. Sainte-Beuve introduced him to Courbet and he ordered a painting to add to his personal collection of erotic pictures, which already included Le Bain turc (The Turkish Bath) by Ingres and another painting by Courbet, Le Sommeil (The Sleepers), for which it is supposed that Hiffernan was one of the models.
Left: Symphony in White, No. 1: The White Girl by James Whistler, another painting of Joanna Hiffernan
But a Paris appeals court ruled in February 2016 that the case should be heard in France.
They called the claim unjustified and asked for a symbolic penalty against Duran of one euro, although they did not explain why his account was taken down, referring only to "a simple contractual dispute". But the lawyer Durand dismissed this argument.
Based on materials Artdaily.