Aside from causing uproar for the provocative bare booty high-profile magazine photoshoots for Interview magazine, Kylie Jenner also received media backlash for her photos where she was seated in a gold wheelchair, an article from E! Online revealed.

Outraged people all over the web sent their messages of disapproval over the photos of the reality television star on Twitter and on other social media sites.

On the photos was Kylie sitting on the gold wheelchair prop wearing some kind of S&M clothing and accessories. She was photographed looking like a living mannequin as her hair was completely set and her eyes staring blankly into space. There was also one photo where she was also seated on the handicap device as she raised one leg in a provocative pose.

Interview was quick to defend their 18-year-old model. They explained, in an exclusive interview to E! News about the meaning of the wheelchair in the photoshoots, "At Interview, we are proud of our tradition of working with great artists and empowering them to realize their distinct and often bold visions. The Kylie Jenner cover by Steven Klein, which references the British artist Allen Jones, is a part of this tradition, placing Kylie in a variety of positions of power and control and exploring her image as an object of vast media scrutiny."

Interview also added that their Art Issue celebrates different women who are creators and subjects of their work. The Kylie feature was supposed to unveil the star's status as both an "engineer of her image and object of attention."

People found the photoshoot shocking despite Interview's defense. They took to Twitter with the following colorful tweets:

From Ophelia Brown @bandaidknees - @KylieJenner wow being in a wheelchair is so fun and fashionable! #Ableism is the ultimate fashion statement!

From Steph Bauble @stephhboal - The idea that Kylie Jenner in a wheelchair is seen as glamorous yet disabled people that use wheelchairs struggle to find modelling work...

From Jessica Jewett Jones @JJ9828 - As someone in a wheelchair @KylieJenner @InterviewMag, this is offensive. My chair is not haute couture.

Negative comments from social media kept pouring in but despite this, the publication promised that they did not mean to be offensive, that they didn't mean to offend anyone especially people that are differently-abled. Interview mentioned that their purpose of using the wheelchair prop was a means of expression, the article from E! Online concluded.

"Our intention was to create a powerful set of pictures that get people thinking about image and creative expression, including the set with the wheelchair," the publication tells us. "But our intention was certainly not to offend anyone."