I  like imperfection, the beauty that lies in a fallen eyelash on a dewy  cheek, an escaped wisp of hair below a rigid ballerina bun, a vest strap  which falls down in the summer to reveal a strip of lighter skin which  the sun has not yet seen. I like these things because they are real,  human and utterly lovely in their candidness, endearing as a child who  says the wrong thing and in doing so reveals some deep truth which  adults have long forgotten. 
 The  poets knew the power of imperfection, Shakespeare famously writing to  his mistress whose eyes were ‘nothing like the sun,’ a sonnet which was  later taken by Lorenz Hart as the template for his song Funny Valentine in which he asks: ‘Is your figure less than Greek? Is your mouth a little weak?’
 Yet  many advertisers in the world of cosmetics seem to have forgotten the  potency of the less than ideal; the way it stirs within us a feeling of  tenderness and recognition. 
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| Actress and Model Natalia Vodianova looking human, a little flawed, slightly shiny round the forehead, yet absolutely gorgeous. Her imperfection and quixotic personal style add to her beauty. | 
 The  beautiful but flawed face which arrests the vision and forces one to  look again is becoming rarer in the pages of glossy magazines. Instead  we have the airbrushed perfection of L’Oreal ads, where the most  exquisite of models are stripped of their human beauty and made to look  strangely robotic in the case of Linda Evangelista, or doll-like in the  case of Doutzen Kroes. Even the beautiful Frieda Pinto is rendered  ordinary by the perfecting mechanisms of L’Oreal, while Penelope Cruz,  sensual and feisty on screen, is so hardened by the L’Oreal polish that  even her tumbling dark mane doesn’t soften her. 
| Supermodel Linda Evangelista airbrushed to the point where she barely looks human. Is this really what the makeup companies think we want to look like? Does any woman truly want to look like this? | 
 Rimmel adverts can also be terrible, managing, by some remarkable feat of  aesthetic bludgeoning, to make both Lily Cole and Kate Moss look  ordinary. How on earth do they do it?
Do  these companies think that women aspire to look bland, perfected,  flawless beyond the limits of their mortality? Or do they think that by  making these beautiful models and actresses so bland they are bringing  them nearer to the average, something which women can at once aspire to  and not feel threatened by?
| Lily Cole by Rimell...and below Lily as herself, embracing her own pre-raphaelite beauty. Which one do you prefer? | 
 Whatever  the reason is for this dull advertising, I call on cosmetics companies  to stop it. It is at once ubiquitous and patronising. It is selling a  lie which women not only disbelieve but no longer wish to hear.
 Yes,  airbrushing is okay and is to be expected, even demanded of fashion,  that realm of fantasy and dreams. What I also demand from adverts is  some individuality, something whimsical and different and unique. I like  the Miss Dior Cherie Advert, where Maryna Linchuk floats away holding  onto a bunch of balloons. If you look closely at this and other adverts  in the same series you will see that her hair is wind-blown and the dark  shadows cast by her heavy brows are still visible, adding to her  reality, her loveliness, her youth, her beauty.

 
I totally agree. The women on the covers of fashion magazines usually look rather bland. Your point about makeup being an extension of yourself is so true. Maryna is so beautiful too.
ReplyDeleteYour blog is awesome. Keep writing, I can't wait for your next post :)