One of the complaints that went viral and was responsible: https://singaporeaffairs.wordpress.com/ ... ed-as-art/
Ironically, the only one of those four that I thought veered closest into porn territory (Foreign Bodies) wasn't one of the two removed.
![sigh [sigh]](./images/smilies/sigh.gif)
My mother's friends were among those writing in to protest, and then we had a small argument about this. I'm not a fan of sex in art, but I hate how they made non-sexual nudity out to be sexual in the first place, greatly exaggerating and at some points completely misrepresenting what those performances entailed. (someone claimed that the Undressing Room was some kind of mass orgy where strangers took each other's clothes off and then made out with each other... which, no.) Plus there were all those people who compared those pieces to far more explicit and intentionally pornographic performances that just so happen to be legal.
I wish people at least read up more on the things they criticise. I was shocked at first just hearing the descriptions, but looking further... they're nowhere as scandalous or sexual as everyone seems to think, and I have a fairly low threshhold as it is when it comes to sexual content. I may also be slightly biased because I have mutual friends with one of the performers (the dude behind Undressing Room) and he comes across as a quiet, thoughtful guy who talked about how his art piece was meant to be an exploration of the fear, vulnerability and shame we associate with nudity, and who has taken various measures to ensure that participants will feel safe and know that they can stop at any time. But instead he's being portrayed as some wild horny ~homosexual~ pervert looking for an excuse to grope strangers in a tiny room.