Here comes the (nude) bride!

Written By Venkatesan Vembu | Updated:

Dressing in solemn white seems rather a tame way to seal a marriage. Increasingly, therefore, young Chinese couples are “sexing up” their weddings

HONG KONG: Dressing in solemn white seems rather a tame way to seal a marriage. Increasingly, therefore, young Chinese couples are “sexing up” their weddings with photo-shoots of themselves in the nude!

Professional photo studios in several cities across China offer discreet “nude photography” services for the private amusement of young couples planning to enter the state of matrimony. And the services are proving tremendously popular with the younger Chinese who have kicked off the Mao suits of their parents’ days – and, with them, every last bit of social conservatism.

“Many young couples enjoy having their nude pictures taken by a professional photographer in a studio,” says Robert Smith, professor of cross-cultural communication in Quzhou College in eastern China.

Typically, couples in China have their formal “wedding photos” taken weeks, even months, ahead of the actual wedding ceremony. In recent decades, as a new Chinese generation rode the country’s breathless economic boom, the trend was to have these photographs taken in exotic locales and in a variety of costumes, but most often in classical white suits and gowns.

Increasingly, however, even that, which once seemed exotic and other-worldly, seems oh-so-20th-century.

Professional studios, sensing a new market, began unveiling nude photography services, and the bride and groom soon followed suit — or rather, stripped off their suits! “Some studios even offer nude photography themes to cater to different needs,” says Wu Bingshun, a professional photographer. “You could, for instance, have an Adam-and-Eve setting, complete with a snake in a Garden of Eden, and a fig-leaf to provide a modicum of modesty.”

These naked photographs do not, of course, go into the official wedding album. “The parents are against such photographs,” says Smith. “So the solution is to take two sets of wedding pictures: one in formal wedding clothes for parents, relatives, and friends to see, and another set of naked pictures for the couple’s enjoyment.”

In matters like this, understandably, discretion is critical. “Even those who are daring enough to want naked wedding photos of themselves don’t want to see those pictures uploaded on some Chinese-language website,” says Wu. The photo studio typically has to sign a secrecy contract before the shoot and hand over all the photographs, even the imperfect ones.

But not everyone in China is thrilled about this naked embrace of what was, until recently, a ‘decadent Western’ social phenomenon. Some say it reflects an unhealthy social trend and is a symptom of a “moral decay” in society. But Wu says, “Nude photography is just a welcome twist to the stale unchanging tradition of the wedding photo.”

In other words, the fig-leaf of social conservatism in China is being blown away by the gusty winds of globalisation. And quite a few young Chinese are giving naked expression to their joy.