Women undress in "Still Not Asking For It" campaign
— “Still not asking
for it” project calls out rape culture and victim blaming
— Black and
white photos shows naked women with powerful anti-abuse
messages on their bodies
— “Marriage is
not consent”, “fashion is not an invitation”, “alcohol is not an excuse”
Regardless of what
someone is wearing, how drunk they are, who they are, no one is ever asking to
be raped, sexually assaulted, or abused.
This is exactly what
a professional photographer Rory Banwell is trying to say with her
powerful photo series called “Still Not Asking For It”. Banwell
started her project in 2014, after she found out she was pregnant with a
girl one of her husband’s friends said “it was time to buy a gun.”
“We were so
disappointed that people’s initial reactions were that we would need to protect
her, purely because of her gender. I decided I needed to do something;
being a photographer, I knew that I could use this medium to accomplish my
something and so “Still Not Asking For It” was born,”
Rory explained.
She was inspired by
a woman, who participated at a Slut Walk Rally in Toronto with ‘Still not
asking for it’ written on her body.
“I liked the idea
that regardless of what anyone is wearing, there is no excuse, no justification
and no invitation for someone to sexually assault them. I decided that by
emulating her original photograph, I could create a powerful message and
collection of photographs,” the photographer added.
“All I want the
project to achieve is conversation. I want people to talk about sexual violence
and how prevalent it is. Whether it is domestic violence, rape or even
sexual harassment; I hope is to inspire an open dialogue about what we can do
to change the terrifying statistics that are included in the project.”
After sharing
the images on Tumblr and Facebook Rory has received overwhelming support for her work along with loads
of angry and disrespectful comments. That’s why she feels it’s necessary for
her to travel around Australia, taking more pictures of people of all
genders, races, cultures, ages to diversify the project and reach a larger
cross section of society.











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