Little Girl Nn Pretty

Little Girl Nn Pretty




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Little Girl Nn Pretty



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This painting was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1933.

Penlee House Gallery & Museum
Penzance




This venue is open to the public. Not all artworks are on display. If you want to see a particular artwork, please contact the venue.





Eileen Mayo
Penlee House Gallery & Museum


Aunt Lilla
Penlee House Gallery & Museum


Sketch of Burmese Children
Atkinson Art Gallery Collection


The Quiet Hour
The New Art Gallery Walsall


Little Sister
Penlee House Gallery & Museum


Early Morning
Royal Pavilion & Museums Trust, Brighton & Hove


Ancilla with an Orange
Royal West of England Academy (RWA)


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© the artist's estate / Bridgeman Images . Photo credit: Penlee House Gallery & Museum
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© the artist's estate / Bridgeman Images . Photo credit: Penlee House Gallery & Museum

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A gallery was today told it could continue to display controversial photographs of naked children without fear of police prosecution despite claims the exhibition is obscene.
The Crown Prosecution Service announced that it would not bring criminal proceedings against the gallery or the artists concerned.
Police were called to the Saatchi Gallery in north London last week after complaints that the pictures, taken by two photographers, were indecent and would appeal to paedophiles.
But a CPS spokesman said that after careful consideration there was no realistic prospect of any conviction under the Protection of Children Act 1978.
The spokesman said: "The CPS has advised the Metropolitan Police that proceedings should not be brought against the Saatchi Gallery over photographs exhibited in the gallery.
"In reaching this decision, the CPS considered whether the photographs in question were indecent and the likely defence of the gallery, ie whether they had a legitimate reason for showing them."
The pictures show the youngsters in various naked poses and wearing masks.
The majority were taken by Ms Gearon of her own children.
A spokesman for the gallery said that the two artists and staff at the gallery were delighted with the CPS decision.
"Everyone at the Saatchi Gallery is very relieved as are all the artists in the show," the spokesman said.
"It's been a very worrying time for the two artists involved and their families. We are extremely grateful to the public and press who have supported the artists and the gallery."
The photographs will remain on show until the end of the exhibition on April 15.
A Scotland Yard spokesman said it remained the police's responsibility to act on complaints from the public, particularly in relation to children.
"We will continue to strongly police the law concerning the protection of children and where we see a risk we will take action," the spokesman said.
Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group






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Robbie Coltrane: Harry Potter actor dies aged 72
Heartbroken village says its final farewells to five-year-old girl
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Published: 20:36 BST, 2 June 2014 | Updated: 22:45 BST, 2 June 2014
These are the 'too-short' shorts that caused administrators at a Montreal high school to kick student Lindsey Stocker off campus.
Stocker donned the jean shorts To Beaconsfield high school on the first hot day of the season, and was temporarily suspended when she refused to change.
The grade 11 girl is seen wearing the controversial shorts for the first time, in pictures published by the Montreal Gazette .
'Too short': These are the denim shorts that got Montreal teen Lindsey Stocker suspended from school
Stocker unwittingly started a revolution by refusing to change out of a pair of shorts, when she was told they were not appropriate for school on May 21.
She refused, and instead printed a poster that she plastered over the school, questioning why girls' bodies were the focus of the rules instead of boys' behavior.
During third period on that day, two vice principals entered her classroom and told everyone to stand up so their outfits could be inspected .
'And when they came to me after about two rows of looking they stopped and told me my shorts were too short and I had to change,' Stocker told the National Post .
Get shorty: Lindsey Stocker says she was humiliated in front of her class for wearing a pair of shorts on a hot day
'They continued to tell me would be suspended if I didn't start following the rules. When I told them I didn't understand why I had to change they told me that it doesn't matter - I don't have to understand the rules, I just have to comply by them.'
Stocker felt singled out and humiliated in front of her class, but what concerned her more was a set of rules that focused on girls' bodies rather than boys' behavior.
So instead of complying with the rules, she went and printed up about 20 posters and stuck them up all over the school.
The posters read, 'Don't humiliate her because she's wearing shorts. It's hot outside. Instead of shaming girls for their bodies, teach boys that girls are not sexual objects.'
Statement: Although Stocker's poster only remained up for about 10 minutes before teachers took it down, it had the desired effect
Support: Stocker has had strong support on social media and other girls at her high school are wearing shorts to school in solidarity
The posters were taken down by teachers after about 10 minutes, but they live on in social media.
Stocker also has won the support and admiration of other girls at school.
'Most people are agreeing with her, women shouldn’t have to cover themselves up completely because we shouldn’t be viewed as sexual objects,' student Sierra Drolet told CJAD News .
Lauren Paquay, 15, showed up wearing shorts in support of Stocker. She said the dress code verification - making girls stand up with their arms by their sides to ensure their outfits are fingertip length - is 'humiliating.'
School rules: The school district spokesperson says there are dress rules for both girls and boys
'People are being judged for the way they dress, they have to change because boys look at them. The boys should be the ones who have to learn to treat women better and look at them in a different light,' she told CBC .
The chairperson of the Lester B Pearson School Board told CJAD News that Stocker has been suspended for not following the rules.
'The rules are there to help the children learn and prepare them for their future work places, high school is a job for them, they are there to learn to function in society, so it’s important that the rules be followed,' Susanne Stein Day says.
'Girls and boys have rules on dress codes; it is not a girl, boy thing, that’s not the point.'
'I was in violation for showing my legs,' she says. 'And that, point blank, is a problem for me.'
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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
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