Thursday, August 29, 2013

A photo of a woman with wrinkles!


OK.  The New York Times Style magazine is not my go-to section. But this last past Sunday, August 25, I thought that maybe I should take a look. One more time, take a look, see if anything had changed, see if the models still looked...well... miserable.  I did find a very happy looking guy, on page 169, selling Andrew Fezza ware. That was a nice change of pace.  And there was Andrew O'Hagan's article, Laws of Attraction.  "No one can deny the glory of youth, but when a woman's experiences can be read on her face...it is then, and only then, that her true beauty appears,"  I read this and was hooked.

"There has probably never been a period so youth-obsessed as ours: we speak of unlined faces as we once spoke of noble minds..."  I liked that, too. By the end of the article, I got the part about the beauty of youth and the loveliness of aging with confidence and intelligence and the part about women nowadays maybe doing a better job of combining looks and intelligence, feeling better about themselves.   

But I was puzzled, too. Very puzzled, and I wondered a lot about the photos accompanying the article. Were they really Mr. O'Hagan's choice, and if so, what was he thinking? Weren't there any available photos at all of beautifully grown women?--They exist. I know they do. But rarely, if ever, in this part of the newspaper. How odd. If the choice was not Mr. O'Hagan's then who was it at the magazine who could have been so laughably (and rather pathetically) out of touch with what's out here in the world, as well as, so wrong about the gist of Mr. O'Hagan's article?   Who was it who thought that photos of young women would make a good match for an article about the beauty of old (older) women? Is the fashion world really that afraid? A photo of a woman with wrinkles or a woman with a figure? O shock, o horror. Can someone there at the magazine or newspaper explain this to me? What century is this?