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Dubai Covers Up Privates Of Michelangelo’s ‘David’ In 3D-Printed Replica Display
By Mikelle Leow, 05 Oct 2021
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Image via Italy Expo 2020
Michelangelo’s idea of the perfect male body is a touch too risqué for this year’s Dubai Expo.
As the Expo’s organizers readied the 3D-printed replica of the famous David for installation, they pondered over how to make the 17-foot-tall sculpture viewable for conservative Muslim visitors. This is also considering that public nudity is a violation in Dubai law.
“We even thought of putting undergarments on the statue,” one staffer told Italian news outlet La Repubblica. There were even talks about abandoning the exhibit, but it was too late to walk back on plans. “We understood too late that it was an error to bring a statue of a nude man to the Emirates,” elaborated the source in a statement translated by the Telegraph.
Instead of keeping his nether regions cozy with briefs, workers found that the golden-ratio body was well-built to be covered up by existing architecture. A stone slab dividing two stories in an octagonal glass gallery would keep his appearance modest.
The upper level invites guests to peer directly into David’s eyes, with wide ledges preventing people from leaning in and looking down. Meanwhile, the lower level presents a view of the sculpture’s legs.
At no point are the buttocks and phallic area visible to the public. The only spot to gaze at them is from the lower level, up close to the glass, where you’d be able to peek upwards—but it’s only accessible by authorities and functionaries.
The incredible “identical twin” of the Renaissance masterpiece was 3D-printed by researchers of the University of Florence. Produced partially out of recycled water bottles, it weighs only 1,200 pounds—about 10% the weight of the original marble statue—while keeping true to its height and detail.
Whereas Michelangelo had spent three years on his sculpture, the 21st-century David only took four months to complete.
[via The Telegraph and Boing Boing, images via various sources]
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