Naked Pic Of Women

Naked Pic Of Women




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Naked Pic Of Women
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W hen Matt Blum began photographing women nude, he didn’t intend to start a movement. He just wanted to make good photography. But over the last ten years, Matt and his wife Kat Kessler have built something that has become both an artistic, captivating collection of photography and a project making bold statements about body-positivity and self-love.
The Nu Project is an online archive of nude photos of ordinary women around the world. The entire project is volunteer based: women invite the photographer into their home for the shoot, and agree to have the photos included on the project’s online gallery free of charge. Viewing the images is free and the online galleries reach 2.8 million visitors a year, half of the traffic coming from audiences outside the states. In 2013, the Nu Project published a book collection of their favorite images over the past seven years (available on Amazon).
What’s most remarkable about the Nu Project photos are their powerful depiction of the ordinary. None of the women photographed are professional models, and the photo “set” is often their unkempt apartment, complete with unmade beds, sprawled magazines, and dirty dishes still sitting in the sink. Women happily pose baring their cellulite, their tan lines, their belly creases as they laugh. Women pose washing dishes, reading magazines, watering the plants, cuddling their lover, or playing with their toddler.
And through these simple depictions, the project makes viewers reconsider what deserves to be captured in a photo, what deserves to be displayed and proudly shared for the world to see, even if just at home . Doing so, it has created an empowering resource for woman seeking proof that what constitutes a “beautiful body” is far more diverse than media suggests .
To make the photos geographically diverse, photographer Matt Blum and editor Katy Kessler have traveled all throughout South America and Europe coordinating shoots with local women to include on the website. According to Matt Blum, the photographer behind the project, women volunteer for a variety of a reasons: anything from a history of body issues, to simple curiosity of trying something new. The only commonality between all participants is that they have the openness and trust to welcome Matt into their home to do his art.
“We never had any governing principles that have stayed consistent, other than the fact that we wouldn’t exclude anyone.”
Many other artists have begun using the internet to combat negative and inaccurate depictions of the female body and begin confronting the insecurities it creates with projects like We Women and The Body Is Not An Apology , or Let Me Love Me, a Facebook Page dedicated not to women, but to people of color.
Through working on the project, Matt has noticed differences in perspectives from women in different areas of the world. But he also believes some ideas are common everywhere:
“In Latin America people are far more conservative about nudity whereas in Europe, people are far more liberal about taking their clothes off. And yet, the idea of the media focusing on similar body types, that’s universal. Europeans still don’t see real bodies in the media. In 2015, across the globe, people react to and respond to this idea.”
Matt hopes to continue exploring the themes of confidence and vulnerability in his future work. He is now currently working on an a project expanding the idea of nudity to include photographs people baring any aspect of their lives they don’t often allow others to see. To see more photos, visit www.thenuproject.com .
“When people see The Nu Project I hope that the very last thing they notice is that no one is wearing clothes.” -Matt Blum, Photographer.
“Anyone who has gone skinny dipping can understand how something about nudity brings people closer together. It makes you a little more vulnerable and so allows you to connect with others a little bit quicker.” - Matt Blum, Photographer
“When a volunteer thinks ‘well I can’t get any more naked, and I’m in my own home, so might as well just be myself’, that’s when the shoot works.” -Matt Blum, Photographer
“My work with this project is to get out of the way of the image and let the story be told." -Matt Blum, Photographer
"In Brazil, I’d hear a lot of women say 'in our country, our bodies are the property of men.'” -Matt Blum, Photographer
"In Germany, we’d hear alot of women say “I’m just tired of photoshop, I want to be a part of a project where the people look like my mom and my friends and that’s valid and that’s beautiful.” -Matt Blum, Photographer
"Photographers are hired to capture super pretty things...But to show something that we typically don’t allow people to see; that’s always what is most interesting to me.” -Matt Blum, Photographer
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Jennifer Lopez, 51, stunned the world with this flawless nude photo yesterday. But one fellow celeb says it’s done “real damage.”
I can’t bear it any longer. There’s something that’s truly getting on my t**s.
And no, sadly, it’s not a handsome young man — it’s the constant and persistent bombardment of images of celebrities displaying their nothing-short-of-perfect bodies.
The other day I had a little cry inside, over Jennifer Aniston, who is 51, jogging her stunning body through some park in the US .
The girl is just two years younger than me but her body is better than mine was at 27.
She is toned, muscly but feminine and there is no sign of excess skin, cellulite, puckering or, in fact, ageing.
Don’t even get me started on her face, which appears to have stayed the same over the past two decades. She looked ravishing.
When I saw this image — and another one of her doing yoga for an advert to promote a wellness drink brand — it was like someone took a giant needle and pricked what remaining, marginally inflated self-confidence I may have scraped from the floor in my 54th year.
I could literally feel myself sinking.
Physically, my heart stopped and wondered if it was worth beating again. Because, quite frankly, I was beginning to question what the point was of going on.
This may sound dramatic but it’s genuinely how I feel.
We live in an unprecedented age of celebrity, based predominantly around image. Everything associated with everyone is about appearance.
Yesterday was another low blow. J-Lo - who is also 51! - was pictured naked looking lithe and shiny, toned, feminine, robust, strapping even, and my feelings of insignificance were elevated to the very highest level.
A dried-up old has-been like me feels intimidated
Look, I’m no idiot. I am acutely aware these women have access to physical trainers, make-up artist, dietitians, cooks, staff . . . not to mention Photoshop.
They get photographed by the best and wouldn’t let anything pass without a decent filter.
And doubtless, if I had the same facilities you might see a very different Ulrika Jonsson to the one you may witness on my social media.
But this peddling of perfection is, I believe, doing some very real damage.
It’s bad enough a dried-up old has-been like me feeling intimidated, paltry and pointless, but I’m concerned about the effect on all women, young and older, famous and “normal”.
As a mum of four — two of whom are young girls aged 16 and 20 — I’m painfully worried about what the effect of being surrounded by these images is doing to them and their sense of self-worth.
They may pretend to me that they are savvy and aware of filters and that these images are sometimes considerably distanced from reality, but I also know that, deep down, they will look in the mirror or at the selfie they take and feel utterly inconsequential.
They must feel they are not measuring up, and let’s not forget, my young girls have age on their side.
My 20-year-old, Bo, said to me the other day: “It’s the worst thing in the world to have social media. It’s toxic.
“You see these skinny minnies with perfect bodies and you just feel awful.”
And that’s her measuring herself against people of her own age.
Imagine, then, how it must feel for women in the “older” age group — of which I most definitely am one.
Think how it must feel for the “ordinary” woman, working or not working, mother or not, knackered, menopausal, physically drained by housework, exhausted by caring for extended family and financial woes.
To know that you’re juggling all of life’s plates and then, even after dolling yourself up with your best clothes and make-up, you still feel insufficient — you’re still not looking “good enough”. I can’t tell you how painful it is.
I have a little Instagram account which allows me some control over what the world sees of me and I made a strategic, albeit unavoidably natural, decision at the very start to show me as I really am.
I do not use filters and much of the time I most definitely look more than my 53 years.
I do not wear make-up in the day because, quite frankly, it’s me and the dogs and they don’t give a monkey’s about foundation and mascara, they just want food and frolicking.
After years of having to wear (often) heavy make-up for TV appearances and photoshoots, I’ve shed that skin and love nothing better than going without.
This slavery to perfection really needs to end
Members of the public who participate on my Insta page (I cannot bear to call them followers — they are better than that), say it’s a breath of fresh air and they like the sense of reality I offer.
I take great pride in those opinions and feel grateful.
I’m not going to lie though, the insecure me often wonders if I could be losing work because of it.
I wonder and fear — a little — that because I don’t look “great, fantastic and spectacular” that I may be sidelined for jobs in favour of those who obsess about their own exquisiteness. It’s a terrible admission to make but, deep down in my soul, I know I have to be true to myself. This is me. This is 53.
Of course, everyone has the right to be the very best “version of themselves”.
I acknowledge that. It might be an ugly world if you saw my boat race everywhere you looked.
But, hopefully and comically, it would be nice if I make people feel better about themselves when they see my image.
Because celebrities and influencers need to remember that with their platform comes responsibility.
Creating unrealistic expectations does so much damage and this slavery to perfection really needs to end.
Why am I not at the peak of my fitness? Why am I not toned, sculpted and looking refreshed? Why does my skin not glisten and glow?
But I doubt it will. When I looked at the gorgeous Jennifer Aniston a couple of days ago I found myself asking what my excuses were for not looking like that.
And then I remembered that I have other things in my life that take priority.
That I have made a choice of not putting that pressure on myself.
And then I see J-Lo looking sensational and I feel faulty and inadequate and I reach for a packet of crisps — and take comfort in thinking of all the other women who will be feeling exactly the same as me.
Ulrika Jonsson, 53, is a British-Swedish TV presenter and former model.
This story originally appeared on The Sun and is republished here with permission.
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Ex-Kangaroos coach Danielle Laidley has opened up about her 50-year struggle with gender dysphoria.
The actress has taken to Instagram with a rare photo of herself posing poolside in a bikini, which also paid subtle tribute to Olivia Newton-John.
Meghan Markle’s newly released podcast has attracted a mixture of opinions, including from two high profile Australian women.

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