100 Sheroes Just Posed Nude At The Republican National Convention

The photography project was a peaceful protest against the hateful, anti-woman rhetoric present in the Republican Party.
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Warning: This piece contains nudity and may be inappropriate for work environments.

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Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes

On July 17, 2016, in the midst of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, 100 women joined forces and got naked.

The mass undressing was organized by photographer Spencer Tunick, who has been planning his large-scale nude photography project, titled “Everything She Says Means Everything,” for months.

In May, Tunick called out for volunteers to participate in his vision, to interrupt business as usual at the RNC with a flood of nude bodies. The only requirement: be a woman ― whether Democrat, Republican, or any other political platform. Tunick hoped the work would serve as an act of peaceful protest, combatting the hateful rhetoric Donald Trump and his followers have directed at women, through the simple power of collective creation. 

The message resonated. Over 1,800 women signed up to participate. Each participant submitted a statement explaining their reason for getting involved. One wanted a way to remember her body during pregnancy, another hoped the experience would help her heal after she was sexually assaulted. Some wanted to accept and celebrate their aging bodies, others to leave a positive impact on their daughters.

Many hoped to stick it to the RNC. The women came together outside Cleveland’s Quicken Loans Arena the day before the convention was scheduled to start.

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Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes

Cleveland-based participant Jennifer Dienes traditionally votes Republican, but was disgusted with the bigotry and hostility Trump ushered into the party’s ethos. She originally supported Rand Paul, but now is leaning Libertarian. “I don’t support the Republican party with Trump at the forefront,” she explained to The Huffington Post. 

Dienes had never participated in a nude photo shoot before, or anything similar. “There were a few people trying to scare me out of it,” she said. “A lot of people were saying, ‘My mom is going to kill me!’ But it was presented in a classy, peaceful way. Sometimes you just have to stand up for what’s right. I’m proud of what I did.” 

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Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes

During the shoot, the diverse, undressed subjects all held a large, round mirror above their heads. Reflecting the earth and sun and sky, as well as the fleshy forms of the manifold women around them, the mirrors spoke to the communal power of womanhood, a force almost supernatural in its strength. As Tunick explained in a statement: “The mirrors communicate that we are a reflection of ourselves, each other, and of, the world that surrounds us. The woman becomes the future and the future becomes the woman.”

Ohio resident Deanna Bergdorf published a Facebook note processing the experience. She described her nerves while heading to the conference site, and her anger when addressing what’s at stake in the upcoming election. “I fought to hold in my tears as [Tunick] explained that we were gathered together to make a statement against the rhetoric of hatred that’s being spewed out from the Republican party; against the misogynistic, xenophobic, racist, anti-LGBTQ, ableist platform that has defined hating others as an acceptable American lifestyle.”

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Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes

Bergdorf’s anxiety diminished as the crowd disrobed, and distinctions between bodies began to seem barely distinguishable and fully insignificant. “I was struck by the sameness of all the different bodies,” she expressed. “All kinds of shapes and sizes were present. We were old and young; we were mahogany and golden, pale and bronze and freckled. Some of us were sleek and lean and ‘unblemished’ by pregnancy and childbirth and years of breastfeeding. Others held decades’ worth of stories in their wrinkles and creases and folds.

“But, the most interesting effect of this collection of difference was (to me) its overwhelming sameness. I had to look closely to even notice who was fit and who was ‘fluffy’ because that kind of detail, or maybe categorization, became little more than background noise.”

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Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes

In a statement, Tunick dubbed women’s bodies one of the most controversial subjects in the upcoming presidential race. With “Everything She Says And Means,” women joined together to show just how non-controversial a woman’s naked body is. The project rejects the sexualization, objectification and prohibition of the woman’s nude figure. (Public nudity is, by the way, illegal by way of indecent exposure in the state of Ohio.) Instead, Tunick’s images present the nude body as something natural, empowering, courageous and collaborative. 

“Holding up the mirrors with the other undressed women, it was really special,” Dienes said. “Seeing all the light reflected on all the bodies and faces. Everyone was so happy. We were proud.”

Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes
Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes
Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes
Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes
Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes
Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes
Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes
Photo credit: Lindsey Byrnes

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Before You Go

Spencer Tunick
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Naked volunteers, numbering around 1,700 people, pose for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick in downtown Munich on June 23, 2012. (credit:Michaela Rehle / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers, numbering around 1,700 people, pose for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick in downtown Munich on June 23, 2012. (credit:Michaela Rehle / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers pose for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick in front of the Sydney Opera House on March 1, 2010. Organizers estimate 5,200 people posed for the early morning nude photo installation titled "Mardi Gras: The Base." (credit:Tim Wimborne / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers pose for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick in front of the Sydney Opera House on March 1, 2010. Organizers estimate 5,200 people posed for the early morning nude photo installation titled "Mardi Gras: The Base." (credit:Tim Wimborne / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers pose for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick in front of the Sydney Opera House on March 1, 2010. Organizers estimate 5,200 people posed for the early morning nude photo installation titled "Mardi Gras: The Base." (credit:Tim Wimborne / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers battle with pillows as they pose for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick in front of the Gaasbeek's Castle on July 9, 2011. Organizers estimated 800 people posed for the early morning nude photo installation titled "Sleeping Beauties." (credit:Thierry Roge / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers battle with pillows as they pose for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick in front of the Gaasbeek's Castle on July 9, 2011. Organizers estimated 800 people posed for the early morning nude photo installation titled "Sleeping Beauties." (credit:Thierry Roge / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers battle with pillows as they pose for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick in front of the Gaasbeek's Castle on July 9, 2011. Organizers estimated 800 people posed for the early morning nude photo installation titled "Sleeping Beauties." (credit:Thierry Roge / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick on the Aletsch glacier on August 18, 2007. Tunick held the photo session for a Greenpeace campaign that highlighted climate change. (credit:Pascal Lauener / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick on the Aletsch glacier on August 18, 2007. Tunick held the photo session for a Greenpeace campaign that highlighted climate change. (credit:Pascal Lauener / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick in a vineyard of Pouilly-Fuisse in Fuisse on October 3, 2009. Tunick held the photo session for a Greenpeace campaign highlighting climate change. (credit:Robert Pratta / Reuters)
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People pose during a performance at the Ernst Happel soccer stadium in Vienna on May 11, 2008. About 1,800 people stripped naked for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick at the stadium that hosted the Euro 2008 soccer final. (credit:Herwig Prammer / Reuters)
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Naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick in the Europarking building in Amsterdam on June 3, 2007. (credit:STR New / Reuters)
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Thousands of naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick at Mexico City's Zocalo square on May 6, 2007. A record 18,000 people took off their clothes to pose for Tunick in the heart of the ancient Aztec empire. (credit:Henry Romero / Reuters)
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Thousands of naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick at Mexico City's Zocalo square on May 6, 2007. A record 18,000 people took off their clothes to pose for Tunick in the heart of the ancient Aztec empire. (credit:Henry Romero / Reuters)
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Thousands of naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick at Mexico City's Zocalo square on May 6, 2007. A record 18,000 people took off their clothes to pose for Tunick in the heart of the ancient Aztec empire. (credit:Daniel Aguilar / Reuters)
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Hundreds of naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick creating a three-dimensional body sculpture at the Museum Kunst Palast in Duesseldorf on August 6, 2006. (credit:Ina Fassbender / Reuters)
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Hundreds of naked volunteers pose for U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick at San Sebastian's Kursaal auditorium on April 22, 2006. Tunick held the session weeks before the San Sebastian International Contemporary Photography and Video-Art Fair. (credit:Pablo Sanchez / Reuters)
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Volunteer participants pose naked inside the Stadschouwburg theatre during a photo session with U.S. photographer Spencer Tunick in the northern Belgian city of Bruges on May 7, 2005. (credit:Peter Maenhoudt / Reuters)
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Volunteers pose naked for U.S. artist Spencer Tunick's installation during the opening of the new Saatchi Gallery in London on April 15, 2003. (credit:Peter MacDiarmid / Reuters)
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Volunteer participants pose naked during a photo session with American photographer Spencer Tunick in the northern Portuguese village of Santa Maria da Feira on September 13, 2003. Spencer Tunick held a group of photo sessions with 300 participants during a festival of open-air theatre art called "Imaginarium." (credit:Reuters Photographer / Reuters)