The protest took place on
private property in sight of the arena where the convention kicks off on
Monday, the focus of multiple groups of protesters expected to take to the
streets this week.
The owner gave permission,
said Tunick, and so while public nudity in Cleveland is illegal, it was not
possible for police to intervene.
Entitled “Everything She
Says Means Everything,” the photo art featured women of all shapes, colours and
sizes participated, holding up mirrors toward the arena.
Over a hundred women
stripped and posed naked with mirrors in Cleveland, answering a photographer’s
call to blend art with politics and portray Donald Trump as unfit for the White
House.
They gathered on the eve of
the Republican National Convention, where the brash New York billionaire will
be anointed the party’s nominee for president after winning a raucous primary
race despite alarm from the party establishment and the country at large about
his divisiveness.
“He is a loser,”
photographer Spencer Tunick said after the sunrise shoot in which 130 women
took part. One hundred of them will be featured in the picture to be unveiled
shortly before the November 8 election.
Tunick’s website said the
mirrors reflected “the knowledge and wisdom of progressive women and the
concept of ‘Mother Nature’… onto the convention center, cityscape and horizon
of Cleveland.”
The artist is well known
for his sometimes startling images of nude people. But Tunick told AFP he
thought it was his most political shoot ever, saying he felt compelled to take
action.
Just voting against Trump
at the ballot box in November was not enough.
“I have two daughters and a
wife,” he said. “I can’t believe the language and rhetoric of hate against
women and minorities coming from the Republican Party.”
He said he had to do
something to counter “this idiotic thinking.”
MaPo Kinnord, 55, an art
professor and artist, said she took part because she loved Tunick’s work and
happened to be visiting her niece in the city where she grew up.
Currently living in New
Orleans, she said the installation opposed Republicans who were making
Americans afraid, by telling them they should fear Muslims and immigrants.
“To be totally naked and
out in the open and to be fearless is what we need to be,” Kinnord explained.
Trump has called for a ban
on Muslims entering the United States and a wall to be built on the Mexican
border to keep out illegal immigrants.
Kinnord said she would
“never” vote for Trump and expressed hope that Britain’s recent referendum
voting to leave the European Union had been a wake-up call against complacency
in the US election.
While she voted for
self-declared democratic socialist Bernie Sanders in the primaries, she said
she was happy to back presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Morning Robinson, 18, took
part with her mother, saying she wanted “to do something a little different”
before going off to college that would enable her to express herself freely.
“I was really nervous at
first,” but it felt good being out in the open and not afraid of her body, she
said.
“Republicans have this view
of how women should be in society and I just don’t agree,” she said. “I don’t
know exactly, I just know their views don’t match mine.”
Size-wise, the artwork was
a far cry from Tunick’s most recent work.
In Colombia last month, he
convinced more than 6,000 women to bare all in Bogota as the war-torn country
neared a peace deal with the leftist rebels of FARC, the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia.
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