I've just realized what has depressed me so much about this thread.
It's the same primitive, mullah-driven morality as George is complaining about in Athens in his 'Model recompense' thread.
Athens: Any girl that poses for nude shots = a whore.
Chicago: Any photographer who wants to take a picture of a colleague = sex maniac guilty of harrassment and in need of counseling (the modern version of going to confession).
While both equations may reflect the mores of old-fashioned, narrow-minded, stupid people, I find it interesting that so many apparently rational people are willing to support the mullahs in Chicago.
If I, my colleague and my bank can't tell the difference between sexual harrassment and a simple request to take a picture, there is something very wrong with all of us.
Cheers,
R.
I think it is very unreasonable to characterize workplace rules designed to create an environment free of sexual harrassment as reflective of the "mores of old-fashioned, narrow-minded, stupid people..."
One of the hallmarks of a progressive society is to ensure an environment where all are free to achieve their professional capabilities without being subjected to a hostile workplace. Sexual harrassment prohibitions are gender-neutral and refer to both same and opposite-sex interactions. They are very much intended to protect an individual in the workplace from being subjected to unwanted "advances"; whether these advances be amongst "equals" or, more pervasively, when used by superiors toward lower-level employees. Many progressive people of both sexes in the US have worked long and hard over the past three decades to eliminate all manner of discriminatory and demeaning behaviors from the working environment here. To now characterize them as "old-fashioned, narrow-minded, stupid people...." is to both turn history on its head and engage in one's own brand of stupidity.
In the case of the OP, he not only wanted to take his co-worker's photograph (a seemingly innocent endeavor that could be done at the office Christmas party). He wanted her to don clothing to enhance her body features so he could shoot sillohettes of her in various "poses". And all of this to take place in his workplace!
If the fellow wants a date; then he should simply ask the co-worker for one. If she accepts his invitation, then at that time he can explain his photographic interests and determine, outside the workplace, if she finds it interesting. There is nothing wrong or untoward about this - and it removes the work environment from the interpersonal equation - thus negating the sexual harrassment situation.
But to pursue this in the context of the shared working environment is unacceptable - at least under US laws and employment practices. There is a time and place for everything - but a bank office is certainly not the time and place to approach someone to engage in an activity unrelated to her work duties.
Finally, as any corporate employer here in the US knows, by permitting a hostile, harrassment-prone working environment - it runs afoul of the law and opens itself up to all kinds of legal claims. As such, the OP very much risks his employment to pursue this matter in the way proposed. Unless one is in a position to offer him alternative employment - one best not counsel him to pursue his proposed course of action.