Eroticon – A Manifesto for Erotic Art and the Right to Nudity
Background: Erotic art has existed across all cultures and eras—from ancient Pompeian frescoes to Japanese shunga woodcuts, from Renaissance paintings to modern photography. It has portrayed love, desire, the beauty of the body, and human intimacy. Yet eroticism is often censored, especially in digital environments where algorithms and platform policies tend to equate nudity with pornography.
Purpose: Eroticon seeks to restore the legitimacy of erotic art as a cultural expression. We defend the right to depict the body, sexuality, and intimacy without being reduced to commercial pornography or filtered out by technical systems.
Principles:
- Erotic art is not pornography. It is not about consumption or exploitation, but about expression, reflection, and aesthetics.
- Sexuality is part of the human experience. Depicting it is not dangerous—denying it, however, has historically been linked to repression.
- Nudity is not a crime. It belongs in art, medicine, education, and everyday life. Showing a naked body is not the same as objectifying it.
- Digital censorship is a democratic issue. When global platforms filter out artistic nudity but allow violence, they distort our worldview.
- Artistic freedom must be defended—even when it challenges norms, morality, or technical guidelines.
Vision: We aim to create a space where eroticism is allowed to be art, where the body can be visible, and where joy is not taboo. Eroticon is an archive, a platform, a defense—for art, for the body, for humanity.
The artist Po Andersson is a fiercely liberated erotic painter whose work celebrates the naked body not as taboo, but as truth. A libertine in the classical sense, he rejects moralistic constraints and embraces sensuality as a form of intellectual and artistic freedom.
His canvases are unapologetically intimate—layered with flesh, myth, and defiance. Andersson paints not to provoke, but to restore: restoring the erotic to its rightful place in art, restoring autonomy to the body, and restoring honesty to the gaze. In a world obsessed with control and concealment, his work is a manifesto of exposure.
He draws from classical techniques, mythological motifs, and modern satire, often blending historical references with raw physicality. Every stroke is a rebellion against shame. Every figure is a declaration of sovereignty.
Whether in oil, digital media, or mixed technique, Po Andersson’s art is not just erotic—it’s emancipatory. It dares viewers to confront their own discomfort, and invites them to see desire not as weakness, but as power.