'It's been a very worrying time for the two artists involved and their families,' said a spokesman. The photographs will remain on show until April 15. Police were first alerted to the controversial pictures on February 8 and covertly visited the gallery four days later.Ī file was submitted to the CPS on February 14 and police later warned the gallery to remove the pictures or risk them being seized. The exhibition, which has been running since mid-January, is sponsored by the Independent on Sunday newspaper, whose art critic describes some of the more controversial images as 'exhilarating portraits of family life'. Gerald Howarth MP, chairman of the cross-party Family and Child Protection Committee, warned the 'intellectual elite' against putting children at risk by sending the wrong message to paedophiles. Gallery officials will meet with police and lawyers to discuss the issue today.ĭetectives will stress their determination to 'police' such exhibitions in the future.
Rachel Stevens looks effortlessly chic in a black off-the-shoulder sundress as she poses with rarely-seen daughters Amelie, 11, and Minnie, eight Gwyneth Paltrow wishes lookalike daughter Apple a happy 18th birthday: 'You are everything I could have dreamed of and so much more'