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Summary
What happens when your art disappears without warning? This episode explores the hidden crisis of artistic censorship on social media platforms, where algorithms and content moderation policies are silencing queer artists, nude photographers, and anyone whose work challenges corporate comfort zones. Elizabeth Larison (Director of NCAC’s Arts and Culture Advocacy Program) and Emma Shapiro (DDA Editor-at-Large and founder of the Exposure Therapy project) discuss how Don’t Delete Art emerged in March 2020 to fight back—and what changed when they delivered 2,000 signatures to Meta’s doorstep. We dig into shadow bans, the politics of the female nipple, and why transparency in algorithms matters for everyone’s creative freedom.
Keywords
artistic censorship, social media moderation, platform accountability, queer art, nude photography, shadow banning, Don’t Delete Art, Meta/Instagram censorship, Free the Nipple, digital rights, content moderation algorithms, artistic freedom, body autonomy, NCAC, Santa Clara Principles
8 Key Takeaways
Shadow bans are invisible censorship: Your work can be restricted and algorithmically suppressed without you knowing why—Meta didn’t even acknowledge this practice until recently, forcing artists to guess why their reach suddenly vanished.
The female-presenting body faces algorithmic discrimination: Studies show AI flags topless women as more sexually suggestive than topless men, even in identical poses—a bias that determines what art the world can see online.
Artists are losing access to platforms faster than institutions are adapting: Museums and galleries haven’t caught up to the scale of online censorship; many don’t understand it’s happening to the artists they support.
Don’t Delete Art’s gallery is both memorial and weapon: By displaying censored work online, DDA creates proof of what’s being lost and makes the invisible visible—turning suppression into documentation.
Corporations deliberately keep content guidelines vague: Platforms intentionally avoid precise definitions to prevent users from gaming the system, but this creates a cat-and-mouse game where artists never know the real rules.
The “artistic context” double standard: Meta acknowledges nudity in painting and sculpture but not photography—meaning the medium matters more than the message, and some artists get granted context while others don’t.
Transparency and user control are the antidotes: Blue Sky’s model (where users opt-in to see certain content) offers a path forward—one that respects both artistic freedom and viewer choice.
One coalition did what single organizations couldn’t: By uniting artists, human rights groups, collectors, and institutions, Don’t Delete Art created the pressure needed to push Meta toward notifications, appeals processes, and account transparency.
The Free the Nipple collaboration marks a shift from defense to offense: DDA’s new two-month takeover isn’t just fighting censorship—it’s celebrating the exact imagery platforms suppress, turning the nipple into a symbol of resistance.
Art censorship online mirrors and amplifies real-world power structures: Who decides what counts as art? Who gets believed when they say their work has value? These questions shape not just what we see, but how we think about bodies, identity, and freedom.
Chapter Breakdown
0:03–1:30 | Welcome & Don’t Delete Art’s Origin Story — David introduces Elizabeth Larison and Emma Shapiro; brief overview of DDA as a coalition convened by NCAC in March 2020.
1:21–3:30 | Why March 2020? The Pandemic Pivot to Digital — Elizabeth explains how COVID forced galleries online and exposed the reality of platform censorship; NCAC’s earlier work defending artists like Amy Greenfield.
3:31–5:10 | Emma’s Entry: From Censored Artist to Activist — Emma shares her journey: facing Instagram deletions, founding Exposure Therapy, connecting with Spencer Tunick, and joining DDA in early 2021.
5:11–7:20 | What It Feels Like to Be Deleted — Emma describes the anger and helplessness of sudden censorship, and her mission to prevent other artists from shutting down in shame.
7:21–9:30 | Elizabeth’s Path: From ACT UP to Advocacy — Elizabeth traces her passion through studying censorship history, the Guerrilla Girls, and understanding art as a tool of resistance.
9:31–12:10 | Why Coalition Architecture Matters — Elizabeth explains how uniting artists, museums, rights groups, and collectors created visibility that single organizations couldn’t achieve—and revealed algorithmic contradictions.
12:07–14:50 | Shadow Bans Explained — Emma and David break down what shadow bans are: invisible suppression, lost reach, no appeals—and how this differs from outright deletion.
14:51–18:15 | The Don’t Delete Art Gallery: Memorial & Resistance — Emma and Elizabeth discuss curating banned artwork online, the pain and joy of it, and its power as proof of what’s being lost.
18:16–20:10 | Platform Variation: Which Sites Are Safer? — Elizabeth advocates for Blue Sky’s user-control model and calls for transparency; why some platforms are more artist-friendly than others.
20:11–21:30 | What DDA Means to Queer Artists — Emma and Elizabeth affirm their commitment to artists whose identities and bodies are most heavily targeted by algorithms.
21:31–23:25 | The Ken Gruenholz Case Study — Elizabeth recounts a low-contrast photograph of two topless men that was flagged—and how it reveals the guesswork behind content moderation.
24:57–28:10 | The Day of Action: Delivering 2,000 Signatures to Meta — Elizabeth and Emma describe the surreal experience of attempting to hand-deliver the DDA manifesto and artist dossier to Meta’s NYC office—and being turned away.
28:11–34:30 | The DDA Manifesto & Santa Clara Principles — Emma and Elizabeth explain the manifesto, its alignment with digital rights frameworks, and why artists must be at the table for platform decisions.
34:31–37:20 | Personal Turning Points in DDA Work — Elizabeth credits Meta’s December 2023 appeals process rollout; Emma highlights presenting at RightsCon and bringing the art community into digital rights spaces.
37:21–40:20 | Launching the Free the Nipple Collaboration — Emma announces the upcoming two-month takeover with founder Lena Esco, featuring artist exhibitions, panels, and calls for submissions.
40:21–43:10 | The Algorithm’s Female Body Problem — Elizabeth breaks down research showing how AI perceives topless women vs. men differently; the history of Free the Nipple’s wins on Meta.
43:11–45:50 | How Artists Can Engage with Free the Nipple Campaign — Elizabeth and Emma outline featured work, submission opportunities, live events, and Eventbrite links.
45:51–49:30 | What Would You Tell the Algorithm Designers? — Emma questions what “artistic context” means; Elizabeth calls for recognition of lens-based media and warns against lazy censorship that harms culture itself.
49:31–57:50 | Lightning Round: Inside the Artist Studio Questions — Elizabeth and Emma share favorite mediums, creative inspirations, sound sensitivities, and hopes for Don’t Delete Art’s legacy.
57:51–58:30 | Where to Find & Support Don’t Delete Art — Emma provides website, Instagram, and Blue Sky handles; information on submitting reports and accessing resources.
Guest Information
Elizabeth Larison
Director, Arts and Culture Advocacy Program at the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC). DDA Core Curator and Administrator. Background in human rights and curatorial studies; 14+ years in arts advocacy. Elizabeth brings institutional knowledge and policy expertise to the fight against digital censorship.
Emma Shapiro
DDA Editor-at-Large, artist, and writer. Founder of Exposure Therapy, a body equality movement focused on the female nipple and bias in how platforms regulate bodies. Emma’s own work has been repeatedly censored on Instagram and Facebook, fueling her activism and curation work with Don’t Delete Art.
Don’t Delete Art Resources
Website: dontdelete.art
Instagram: @dontdelete.art
Blue Sky: DontDeleteArt.bsky.social
Submit a censorship report: Available on the DDA website
Browse the gallery: Featured banned artworks and artist stories
Free the Nipple collaboration: Launches shortly after this episode; follow DDA socials for updates
Referenced Organizations & Frameworks
Santa Clara Principles — Framework for platform accountability and transparency in content moderation
Free the Nipple Movement — Founded by Lena Esco; global movement for body equality and topless freedom
ACT UP — Historical activist organization (referenced as influence on advocacy models)
Guerrilla Girls — Feminist art collective (referenced as influence on art-as-resistance)
Art in the Raw Resources
Read essays & updates: Salon Naturale
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