The art exhibition, 'Sex and joy'
He says putting the exhibition together has taught him "how similar we are in terms of images of sex and joy, but also about the unease in the representation of this private act".
"There's no civilisation which hasn't had problems with it," he adds.
The curators have made a point of only including works which show sex between consenting adults. There is nothing which suggests violence or sex with children.
While many of the works can be seen at any major gallery on permanent exhibition, this collection bans under-18s from attending.
Certainly when a work is old it appears to us as more acceptable as art rather than pornography.
Professor Kemp says art is also more complicated than porn, arousing a mixture of emotions. The other big difference is the quality.
"It became clear where pornography stops and art starts," he explains.
"If you look at the frescoes from Herculaneum, they employed major artists.
"If you went to Soho to a brothel today, you don't expect major artists to be deployed.
Destroyed
"If you take the Japanese works, they are very explicit, more so than in the West.
"But the levels of artistry are high, they are sumptuous, beautiful, delicate and refined."
The Japanese prints were made by leading masters including Hokusai. The woodblock prints show men and women in elaborate clothes and equally elaborate poses and were intended for use in brothels and private homes.
There are also Chinese works showing beautiful scenes of gentle love-making in quiet gardens. Chinese erotic art is a little known tradition because so much was destroyed in the Mao era.
The exhibition throws light on how different cultures at different times have viewed sex.
What it reveals above all is how styles of art have changed over the centuries, while human beings and their desires have essentially stayed the same.
Seduced: Art and Sex from Antiquity to Now runs until 27 January 2008 .
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/entertainment/7045772.stm
Published: 2007/10/16 11:03:34 GMT
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