Glossier, #NoMakeup, and the authenticity myth – Document Journal

Posted: November 5, 2019 at 12:46 am


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From Maybe Shes Born With It to You Look Good: how beauty brands sell us on the compulsive labor of self-optimization

The Glossier girl is carefree, charming, and preternaturally beautiful. We watch her swipe sheer gloss onto smiling lips, or dab a dot of concealer under bright eyes; she uses her hands to apply the color, finger-painting on already-flushed cheeks. Rather than showcasing the products effectiveness, the Glossier girls conspicuous lack of before and after underscores the importance of experience versus result. Her coy smile suggests that with the right combination of product and lifestyle, we too could attain this state of perfect imperfection.

Digital and millennial pink, Glossier entered the beauty scene in 2014 when the industry was in the midst of a body-positive rebrand. Drugstore titans like Pantene, Covergirl, and Dove had successfully leveraged womens empowerment as a mainstream marketing strategy, tackling female-centered social issues in viral campaigns such as #ShineStrong, #GirlsCan, and Real Beauty Sketches. The widespread success of those campaigns ushered in a new era of advertising, with brands now required to become fluent in the language of contemporary feminism while continuing to profit off mainstream beauty ideals.

Glossier was perfectly poised to fill the new demand for beauty products that integrate the feminist ideal of self-acceptance with the capitalist imperative of self-improvement. The launch of Glossiers original product line also coincided with the popular rise of multi-step skincare, a beauty regimen which similarly blurs the experiential boundary between ritual and result. As makeup, [Glossier] promises to mimic the effects of impeccable skincare, wrote Haley Mlotek for The Fader in 2016. As skincare, it promises to replace the need for makeup entirely.

This demographic restriction of no-makeup makeup is, of course, part of the appeal: much as Brandy Melville profits off the exclusivity of their limited sizing, Glossier provides a self-improvement ritual for women who already fit within a hairs breadth of dominant beauty ideals.

Glossiers cultlike following is due in part to Emily Weiss, the companys founder, CEO, and resident New York It-Girl, previously known for spearheading Into The Gloss, a popular blog about womens beauty routines. With only two brick-and-mortar retail stores, the brand has leveraged their social following and philosophy of hands-on community engagement to cultivate both an avid fan-base and a high degree of visibility. Glossiers signature pink poucha free gift easily repurposed as a chic makeup bag, travel case, or even a handbaghas become an omnipresent accessory among millennial women, much as the free canvas totes that come with a New Yorker subscription became an iconic status symbol on the streets of Manhattan.

The Glossier Flagship, which is located within spitting distance of my workplace, routinely draws crowds of millennial devotees waiting in line while brand representatives dole out boxed water or free umbrellas (Isnt their entire business model making you pay crazy amounts of money for repackaged vaseline and oxygen? asked my colleague when I brought this up on Slack.) Indeed, Glossier has been criticized for the practical limitations of their sheer, barely-there makeup products (Glossier Announces New Line of Makeup For Women Not Already Beautiful, reads the title of Mara Wilsons 2017 article for Reductress, where she describes the brands popularity among models, future models and Instagram models, introducing a new parody product line, Prettier, that will contain actual tints.) This demographic restriction of no-makeup makeup is, of course, part of the appeal: much as Brandy Melville profits off the exclusivity of their limited sizing, Glossier provides a self-improvement ritual for women who already fit within a hairs breadth of dominant beauty ideals. The Prettier satire is made all the more ironic by the 2019 launch of Glossier Play, a new sub-brand of dialed up beauty extras that encompasses everything the original brand shied away from (though it includes sparkles, glitter, and primary colors, it still stops short of doing any cosmetic heavy lifting when it comes to concealing problem areas.)

In her 2019 essay on the compulsive labor of self-optimization, Jia Tolentino describes the ideal woman: Everything about [this woman] has been preemptively controlled to the point that she can afford the impression of spontaneity and, more important, the sensation of ithaving worked to rid her life of artificial obstacles, she often feels legitimately carefree. Rather than compulsively applying makeup before she heads out the door, this woman has paid a premium to identify as low-maintenance. This affords her an experience of freedom from the oppressive force of beauty standards, while maintaining a level of physical appeal that has proven benefits.

Much as the rise and fall of hemlines is informed by norms surrounding womens modesty, the history of beauty has been marked by its fluctuating relationship with the natural.

There is a wealth of options available to the customer looking to maintain the illusion of beauty low-maintenance: from microblading and eyelash extensions to injectables, plastic surgery, and veneers. By offering rotating discounts for services such as teeth whitening, facials, and long-lasting gel manicures, the advent of the mobile couponing app Groupon has broadened the pool of people with access to luxury cosmetic treatments previously reserved for the wealthy.

With todays abundance of online beauty resources, makeup tutorials, and access to Facetune, everyday opportunities for self enhancement now extend beyond upper class demographics. Yet as the pursuit of beauty is becoming more egalitarian on an individual basis, the authority of the natural and the policing of fakery remain a dominant principle in maintaining the social order. Much as the rise and fall of hemlines is informed by norms surrounding womens modesty, the history of beauty has been marked by its fluctuating relationship with the natural (one might consider the trajectory of womens eyebrows from the needle-thin pluck of the 1920s to the fashionably bushy eyebrows of today.)

Beauty isnt the only economic signifier subject to revision. In the 1900s, the advent and popular adoption of plastics like celluloid and synthetic resin challenged the implicit value of material by creating identical replicas of luxury items such as ivory and amber. Suddenly, plastic imitations of powerful class signifiers could be cheaply reproduced, and stigmatizing imitation materials as fake was one way to ensure that the value of luxury materials was not entirely eclipsed by their synthetic counterparts. More than a substance, plastic is the very idea of its infinite transformation, writes philosopher and cultural critic Roland Barthes. It is this, in fact, which makes it a miraculous substance: a miracle is always a sudden transformation of nature. Today, the recent increase in beauty mobilityand the popularization of transformative editing tools like Photoshop, Facetune, and Instagram filtershas spurred increased scrutiny towards artificial forms of beauty, much as the fashions of the elite change when the aesthetic becomes more widely available.

The appeal of natural beauty is nothing newsearch #nomakeup and you will find some 18.2 million posts on Instagram, ranging from close ups of skin texture to smiling models to acne scars to eyelash extensionsbut Glossier has undeniably played a role in turning the aesthetic of natural makeup into an aspirational image of effortless glamour. And yet, while Glossiers championing of real beauty seems like a harmless extension of the self-acceptance narrative, focusing on the concept of authenticity precludes makeups more substantive power to enable self-actualization and personal expression. Its this same assertion of natural value that serves to ensure beautys exclusive status, ignoring those whose natural beauty hasnt seen layers of expensive treatments or who dont meet impossible beauty standards with a morning routine consisting of a splash of water and a well-placed dab of rose-flavored vaseline.

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Glossier, #NoMakeup, and the authenticity myth - Document Journal

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November 5th, 2019 at 12:46 am

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