If you subscribe early, you could get a free museum ticket.

Vienna OnlyFans

Who says you can’t get a little classy on OnlyFans? 

The Vienna Tourist Board is turning to the content subscription platform to post images of artwork deemed too NSFW for Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok, according to a fascinating new story by NBC. The images — from famed Austrian museums including the Leopold Museum, the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna, and the Albertina — previously got the organization’s accounts flagged with content strikes on those social media sites. 

Now, they’re hoping OnlyFans will provide a more welcoming home for artists whose work had been deemed "pornographic" by conventional platforms.

"What is Vienna doing on OnlyFans? Vienna is home to some of the world’s most famous artworks, many containing nudity," the tourist board said on its OnlyFans page. "The most prominent social networks have policies in place that ban or censor such works. With our OnlyFans account, we want to give these artworks the freedom they deserve — including on social media."

Sweetening the Pot

As an additional draw, the tourist board is offering its early subscribers either a city transportation card or a free ticket to one of their featured museums to see "Vienna laid bare" in person. 

"By putting Vienna’s historical 18+ content on OnlyFans, subscribers can now view provocative works by the likes of Egon Schiele, Richard Gerstl, Koloman Moser and Amedeo Modigliani — all of which are on show for all to see in the capital," the Vienna Tourist Board said in a statement on its website.

Art Uncensored

The entire situation brings up messy questions about the nature of art and censorship. Where do these social media platforms draw the line between what's considered art and what's porn? And, at the end of the day, does anyone have the right to do so?

Regardless, it’s an innovative and unique take on the OnlyFans platform, which is typically used by sex workers to sell X-rated images and videos of themselves. However, the introduction of an established "fine art" organization might open the doors for others to follow suit. At the very least, it'll provide another avenue for folks to take in some fine — albeit NSFW — art during the time of lockdowns and social distancing. 

READ MORE: Vienna’s museums turn to OnlyFans to promote lewd art [NBC]

More on art: Scientists Use AI, 3D Printing to Uncover Hidden Picasso Painting


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