Megumi Igarashi, aka Rokudenashiko, arrested for emailing digital template of her genitalia to supporters of her art
Megumi Igarashi
A Japanese artist who made a kayak modelled on her vagina has denied
obscenity charges at the start of her trial in a case that has drawn
accusations of censorship and double standards.
Megumi Igarashi, who calls herself Rokudenashiko – which roughly translates as good-for-northing girl – was first arrested last
July after distributing 3D scans of her genitalia to people in return
for donations to her project to create the unusual kayak.
The 43-year-old artist
told the Tokyo district court on Wednesday that her “vagina selfies” were not
obscene. “I do not dispute the facts [of the charge], but my artwork is not
obscene,” Igarashi said, according to the Kyodo news agency.
Defence lawyers will
argue that using the penal code to punish obscenity violates Igarashi’s
constitutional right to freedom of expression. “Even if it were constitutional,
the defendant’s work is not a precise reproduction of the vulva and does not
cause sexual arousal,” Kyodo quoted a defence counsel for Igarashi as telling
the court.
If found guilty, Igarashi could face up to two
years in prison or a maximum fine of 2.5 million yen (£14,200) for distributing
obscene objects.
She is accused of
distributing data to people in return for donations to the crowd-funding kayak
project. The recipients could use the data to print 3D images of her genitalia.
Her vagina-inspired artworks were also exhibited at
a sex toy shop in Tokyo, according to the indictment. The 44-year-old owner of
the shop, Minori Watanabe, was arrested and ordered to pay a 300,000 yen fine.
Igarashi said she had
sent the data to people who had donated more than 3,000 yen to the kayak
project. She said she was prepared to take her case all the way to Japan’s
supreme court if necessary.
Igarashi has made a name
for herself with her Decoman “Decorated Vagina” series of sculptures.
The titles of the works incorporate the word “man”, from manko, the Japanese
slang for vagina.
Her case has attracted
worldwide attention and criticism of the apparent double standards in the
Japanese law’s treatment of sexual imagery. While the country has a thriving
pornography industry, its obscenity laws ban the depiction of genitalia, which
usually appear pixelated in images and videos.
Commentators pointed out
the hypocrisy of her initial arrest, which came soon after Japanese
authorities resisted pressure to ban pornographic
images of children in manga comics and animated films.
Megumi Igarashi
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