ONTD

6:18 pm - 04/26/2012

People magazine's natural beauties


People
 magazine's Most Beautiful issue features Beyoncé on the cover, but inside, there are pages and pages of more Beautiful People, including a 10-page spread of female celebrities photographed wearing "not a drop of makeup." Ben Watts shot intimate, natural portraits of Rose Byrne, Julie Bowen, Paris Jackson, Zooey Deschanel, Lily Collins, Jessica Paré, Sandra Lee and Paula Patton. And they all look beautiful, sure. But of course they're not on the cover. The cover sticks to formula: Makeup, hair, lighting, Photoshop.

A couple of years ago French Elle ran some covers of stars SANS FARDS, and I had mixed feelings then, as I do now. Unlike Star magazine, where the celebs are mocked for daring to appear in public without spackle, the People editors gush, "bare is breathtaking," and declare that the women are showing off "natural beauty." And they are. They are.




But when it comes to trying to figure out the point of this exercise, it's very confusing. Take 14-year-old Paris Jackson. Yes, she is gorgeous. Stunning! And slightly reminiscent of the Afghan woman from National Geographic. But don't we usually see her without makeup? Are we supposed to be gawking at her because she's beautiful without makeup, or beautiful, period? Is the lesson here that you don't need makeup to be beautiful? Because, uh, it helps that she is 14.


With Mad Men's Jessica Paré, it is interesting to see her face without makeup, because most of us see her in character as Megan, the new Mrs. Draper. That means red lips, lots of foundation, '60s eyeshadow. Who knew she had freckles? Or that her eye color is so striking? Showing us someone in an entirely different light, that's quality journalism. That's a story.


But let's talk about Zooey Deschanel, seen here without her signature false lashes. We've seen her sort of bare before — in Elf,for instance — but lately she's been doing the doe-eyed eyeliner and fluttery lashes thing. So she looks different. It feels like a set-up, in a way: If you think she looks bad, aren't you just thinking as a member of the oppressively rigid society that keeps women feeling that they have to be flawless? And if you think she looks good, which, by the way, I do, then what is the point? What is the "what" here? Is the takeaway "beautiful people still look beautiful without mascara"? Are we meant to revel in the wonder of the human form and throw away our Maybelline Great Lash, en masse?

You could argue that ladies like to look at other ladies. And we like to look at pretty things, so clearly we like to look at pretty ladies. But the female-on-female gaze, in this context — we hid the people without makeup on the inside, so as not to scare you! — feels strange. There's very little text accompanying these images; the photos themselves are the point. Look at these women! No makeup!! If the cover, or the entire issue featured women without makeup, it might be a lesson, reminding us how most of the images we see in magazines are based in reality yet completely unreal. But this way, it feels like bait, the kind that we, as highly visual creatures, can't resist.

Which is not to say that it's a bad idea to print photographs of celebrities without makeup, jarring us out of our glossy image haze. It's a good idea. I just wish it didn't feel like (or have to be) a stunt.



SOURCE
golden_train 26th-Apr-2012 10:21 pm (UTC)
zooey looks old.
punishermax 26th-Apr-2012 10:22 pm (UTC)
BEING A MAGICAL PIXIE DREAM GIRL IS HARD WORK GOD DAMMIT
thatshot 26th-Apr-2012 10:25 pm (UTC)
she has some major hyper-pigmentation. all these people need is some good skincare. i know that they get busy n shit but still
redlipped 26th-Apr-2012 10:50 pm (UTC)
She is old. Isn't she almost pushing 40 or somp? She just acts young, which in turn makes things really awkward.
killetheth 26th-Apr-2012 10:52 pm (UTC)
she's 32
personally it's nice seeing her look her age considering the makeup she wears makes her look early 20s
heart_iswild 26th-Apr-2012 10:55 pm (UTC)
i wonder how she does it
winegums 26th-Apr-2012 10:52 pm (UTC)
She annoys the shit out of me, but 32 is hardly "pushing 40".
jainypoo 26th-Apr-2012 11:37 pm (UTC)
I know...I'm 36. THAT'S nearing "pushing 40" haha
winegums 26th-Apr-2012 11:46 pm (UTC)
lol, 36 is hardly "pushing 40", that's still mid-30s!
therealycats 27th-Apr-2012 12:51 am (UTC)
lol ikr
totalroyalty 4th-May-2012 01:56 am (UTC)
seriously. I also think it sounds really condescending. why do we treat people (particularly women) like they're meat, beginning to rot, as soon as they hit X age? I just turned 23 and a lot of my friends (who are younger) have terrible terrible attitudes on aging, but its no surprise given how we treat birthdays.
deborahkla 28th-Apr-2012 11:03 pm (UTC)
And "pushing 40" isn't old. I'm 54. That's considered "old", although I sure don't feel it.
xx_rapunzel_xx 29th-Apr-2012 03:15 pm (UTC)
i'm late to this, but idk, in terms of life and death, 54 is young. 70s are even young. 80s are old. but when you think about life and all the different decades you've lived through and things you've experienced, 54 years are a lot of years. i think it's great that you don't feel old. i'm turning 24 next month and i feel like i'm past my prime (or, at least, haven't accomplished all the things i should have by this age).
deborahkla 1st-May-2012 08:21 pm (UTC)
Thank you for your kind words! I sometimes feel past my prime, but not always--and I'm 30 years older than you! In some ways I think the twenties are harder than adolescence, because young people have so many decisions to make, and they think that each one is fatal or lasting. It isn't. It's never too late to change your mind, or change directions entirely, so don't feel as though you're past your prime. You have many, many years ahead of you to accomplish whatever you want to accomplish. There are things I haven't yet accomplished--note the "yet"--but I'll never give up hope until I actually stop breathing!
wristtattoos 26th-Apr-2012 11:27 pm (UTC)
yes
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