via Instagram

Instagram apologises for deleting Pedro Almodóvar’s lactating nipple art

The artwork promoting Parallell Mothers depicts a lactating nipple

Instagram has issued an apology after censoring a poster for Pedro Almodóvar’s new film, Parallel Mothers (Madres Paralelas). The artwork was removed from the social network for depicting a lactating nipple, but has since been restored due to its “clear artistic context”.

Parallel Mothers is the latest work in a lifelong collaboration between Penelope Cruz and Almódovar, following the lives of two women who cross paths in hospital as they prepare to give birth. It will open at the Venice Film Festival on September 1.

Facebook, Instagram’s parent company, said that several images of the film’s poster were removed “for breaking our rules against nudity” after they were posted to the platform on Monday. 

“We do, however, make exceptions to allow nudity in certain circumstances, which includes when there’s clear artistic context. We’ve therefore restored posts sharing the Almodóvar movie poster to Instagram, and we’re really sorry for any confusion caused,” the statement added.

Javier Jaen, who designed the promotional image – made to resemble an eyeball shedding a teardrop – said Instagram “should be ashamed” for its “censorship”. He also offered “a million thanks” to those who circulated the poster on social media in defiance of its ban, and thanked Almodóvar and his production company El Deseo for their “courage, integrity, and freedom”.

After expressing doubts about the suitability of the poster for social networks, Jaen said he was reassured by the Spanish auteur. “He told me that he had made films with posters his whole life, long before Instagram, and he would keep doing so after Instagram, too.”

This is not the first time Instagram’s stance on nudity has drawn criticism. Last year the platform updated its policy after being accused of discriminating against plus-size model Nyome Nicholas-Williams for allegedly infringing on it’s semi-nudity guidelines.

The “breast squeezing” in her images was at first deemed to be too closely associated with pornography, but following a campaign against the social media network involving a petition with 17,000 signatures, the policy was “refined”.

Read Next
Q+AHow Benny Safdie rewrote the rules of the sports biopic

Dwayne Johnson stars as a bruised fighter hiding behind muscle and myth in The Smashing Machine, Safdie’s first-ever solo feature

Q+AHarris Dickinson’s Urchin is a magnetic study of life on the margins

We speak to Dickinson about directing and acting alongside Frank Dillane, the fragility of the human mind and his upcoming role as John Lennon

FeaturePaul Thomas Anderson on writing, The PCC and One Battle After Another

The director talks to Dazed about his most ambitious film yet – a sweeping father-daughter thriller about activism, revenge and the price of a past that won’t stay buried

Art & PhotographyIn pictures: Jefferson Hack launches new exhibition with exclusive event

On Sunday night, Jefferson Hack hosted a private dinner at 180 Studios to celebrate Paradigm Shift: new dimensions in moving image, a major new exhibition in partnership with Ray-Ban Meta