| You might enjoy that. It shows that pre-conceived ideas may not be correct.
For four years French-born photographer Sophie Ebrard followed porn director Gazzman on sets around the world.
The result is 'It's Just Love', an intimate and reflective photo series of life behind the scenes at porn shoots.
Sophie said she wanted to show the private, quiet moments from the periphery of porn, “an interaction between a number of like-minded people; a means to making a living and an enjoyable profession just like another".
She said: Somewhat strangely, porn is ahead of the moral standoff: it’s completely open about what it does and, whether you agree with it or not, it’s actually creating something.
'It's Just Love' was first exhibited at Sophie's own house in Amsterdam, as part of the city's Unseen festival, which runs until September 27.
The exhibition was curated by festival co-founder, Roderick van der Lee, who said:
"Over the past decade and a half in particular, we’ve become increasingly desensitised, even numbed, by sex in imagery, because it has become increasingly explicit and present. ‘It’s Just Love’ incurs much stronger emotions, such as tenderness, humanity and a sense of fun by going in the other direction, by not being explicit, and by not falling into the traps of the many cliches of portraying the industry.
Sophie’s approach, combined with the staging of the exhibition in her home, underline the personal and intimate nature of the exhibition. Which makes ‘It’s Just Love’ such a great part of the Unseen festival, where we aspire to showcase projects that are visually pleasing, but also raise questions about the medium by suggesting a thoughtful direction."
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Although I still consume a lot of pornography, it has absolutely dulled my sensitivity over the years. It's all so much, all time time, all hard core - it reflects the modern world. Everything all at once, all the way, no chance to take a breath and reflect in a quiet moment.
But I have to salute to the artist for being talented in selling something trivial to upper class people for a shitload of money. I, regrettably, never possessed such valuable skill.
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