Japanese police have arrested a Tokyo artist on obscenity charges for distributing data that allowed recipients to make 3D prints of her vagina, sparking protests over what supporters said was an attack on free expression.
Megumi Igarashi, 42, who calls herself Rokude Nashiko which roughly translates as โbastard kidโ, had been trying to raise funds online to pay for the construction of a kayak, using a 3D printer, modelled on the shape of her genitals.
Japan has a notoriously vibrant pornography industry that caters to a vast array of tastes. But obscenity laws still forbid the depiction of actual genitalia, which usually appear censored or pixellated in images and videos.
The artist โ who has created other genital-inspired artworks โ was arrested Saturday for โdistributing data that could create an obscene shape through a 3D printer,โ a police spokesman told AFP on Tuesday.
Before her arrest, Igarashi โ who remained in detention on Tuesday โ had collected about one million yen ($9,800) through an Internet crowd funding site.
In exchange for donations, she supplied data to supporters that would let them create 3D prints of her genitals.
Igarashiโs supporters said they were shocked by what they described as the policeโs unusually broad use of Japanโs obscenity laws in this case.
Activist Minori Kitahara said police raided Igarashiโs office and seized 20 of her artworks.
โJapan is still a society where those who try to express womenโs sexuality are suppressed, while menโs sexuality is overly tolerated,โ she said.
Japanโs pornography industry is predominantly targeted at men and the country only last month made the possession of child pornography illegal.
The ban excludes โmangaโ comics โ those aimed at adults as well as children, โanimeโ video and computer-generated graphics, following calls to protect freedom of expression.
Campaigners had long urged Japan to toughen its stance on child pornography, complaining it was a major source of the material for global markets.
If convicted, Igarashi could receive up to two years in jail or a fine of as much as 2.5 million yen, according to her lawyer.