Sunday 9 May 2010

Packaging Beauty and Compressed Shapes

Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin have always pushed the boundaries of fashion photography and with their latest editorial for V, they have worked with stylist Panos Yiapanis and artist Paddy Hartley.  Hartley’s one of a kind plexiglass face corsets, make the models look like packaged meat products.


Sleeping with a meat-muslin mask would keep you young.
According to 1930’s The Art of Feminine Beauty by Helena Rubinstein, beef could provide a fabulous facial: “Cut pieces of paper—a strip to cover the forehead, another for cheeks, chin, and a thin narrow strip for the nose. Give your pattern to the butcher, who will cut the meat accordingly. Leave openings around the eyes and lips. Pack the meat over your skin and secure it with a strip of muslin. Leave it on one to two hours or overnight if possible.”


Hartley has received international acclaim for a series of face corsets focused on exploring attitudes towards plastic surgery and ideals of facial beauty.  The bioglass and cinching invoke Botox, collagen, implants and other techniques that stretch and compress faces into their proposed ideal shape – but only temporarily. Hartley elaborates on these ideas and more in an excellent interview over at We Make Money not Art.

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