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No Wonder our Perception of Beauty is Distorted

Posted by & filed under Other / Canada.

This is a video from dove’s cam­paign for real beauty where you see a girl get a heavy makeup and then get “fixed” in Pho­to­shop before she’s beau­ti­ful enough for an ad.

Before After

Watch Dove’s video here

9 Responses to “No Wonder our Perception of Beauty is Distorted”

  1. Gloria

    That’s fas­ci­nat­ing, if a lit­tle sad. The Pho­to­shop­ping was prob­a­bly the most appalling. Not only “touch­ing up” but actu­ally phys­i­cally alter­ing her very bone and skin structure.

  2. mrG

    I think we maybe miss the point with these excerises. It’s like what Carl Jung said about UFO’s and how it is not nearly so inter­est­ing whether UFOs exist or not, but how tena­ciously we cling to the desire to want them to be real — what I find fas­ci­nat­ing about these pho­to­shop­pings (and I don’t believe the Lazy Canuck for a sec­ond) is the vec­tors the artist takes attempt­ing to anneal the “source face” into the abstracted “per­fected face” because it says some­thing very impor­tant, psy­cho­log­i­cally, about the human per­cep­tion of face features.

    Con­sider the famous zen gar­dens, or the later paint­ings by Picasso, each of them stud­ies into the neu­rocog­ni­tive real­ity, extract­ing essen­tial details from the sub­ject mat­ter, enhanc­ing and high­light­ing those details, arriv­ing at not an image of stark mun­dane pho­to­graphic exac­ti­tude, but at an image of see­ing our way of see­ing, of see­ing vision, of see­ing the mechan­ics of the way we humans turn the noise-laden real­ity of our bare senses into abstracted Pla­tonic forms which we can read­ily remem­ber and recognize.

    IMHO, crit­i­ciz­ing the pho­to­shop artist is as lame a past­time as crit­i­ciz­ing the gram­mar of the per­son bang­ing on your door to tell you your roof is on fire. You may not agree with their abstract/extraction of her ‘essen­tial’ fea­tures, and the sane response would be to present your own abstract/perfected view of her, but to put a blan­ket dis­missal on the prac­tice or to turn it upside down to assert that every woman is some­how trapped in a game of try­ing to be her own per­fected abstract self is fod­der for comic books, not a viable life strategy.

    Thus the woman on the right is every bit the woman on the left, in the eyes of the pho­to­shop­per, and in the eyes of all those who find they would rather stare quixot­i­cally at the right image while find­ing it easy to pass the other image by. Those who know that woman on the left, espe­cially those who are close to her, and ok, maybe the lazy canuk too, they prob­a­bly already see that right-side image on the right every time they look at her.

  3. The Lazy Canadian

    You don’t believe me?

    I sim­ply pre­fer real peo­ple to mod­els and what not; I’ve never found what cur­rent fash­ion claims to be beau­ti­ful all that inter­est­ing; peo­ple tend to look man­u­fac­tured these days. =\

  4. akanett

    I am not sur if I am look­ing at the same girl. But if I am, then we have all been fooled. Con­cern­ing the free dig­i­tal cam­era, I think it is pretty cool for free.

  5. roseofblack25

    We watched the video to this in our media class…we are doing pho­to­shop stuff currently…and yes it is the same girl…just extremely pho­to­shopped, they made her eyes larger, her neck longer, lips larger, shoul­ders more narrow…and more.

    I think she looked fine to begin with she just had bad skin…

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