This Painting Is 'Too Obscene' For Facebook

Meet the 52-year-old who isn't allowed on Facebook because she's "too suggestive".

This image is of the painting Ice Cream which was created in 1964 by one of the world's first pop artists, Evelyne Axell.

It was uploaded last week by the Philadelphia Museum of Art however censors removed it shortly afterwards.

The museum says Facebook told them it shows "excessive amounts of skin or suggestive content".

Far from obscene, experts at the museum described the painting as "challenging typical standards by showing women...and their playful characteristics".

They described the artist as one of "the first female Pop artists who, when it came to art, only had one thing on her mind - confidence.

"Evelyne aimed to paint pictures of women who were confident in their pursuit of satisfaction, rather than the decorative objects they were painted as in mainstream Pop Art."

Not convinced by Facebook's policy, officials at the museum revealed Facebook's ruling on social and asked its followers what they thought.

One person responded: "I think Facebook's response is exactly the sort of thing Evelyne Axell was shooting for when she created this image, so good job Evelyne".

Another user said the "image should be allowed".

"Pop [art] was not just day-glow clean, it was often cheeky or gritty, but mostly the provocation was enacted through images of nude women," the art fan said.

Facebook has not yet commented on its decision to remove the Ice Cream painting.

The story comes as Facebook faces criticism in the UK after a BBC investigation revealed the site had refused to remove obscene photographs of children being shared by secret groups on the social network.