9
Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

  • Upload
    tracy

  • View
    16

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?. “I find people better looking without clothes than with clothes. You can go to a gym and go to a steam room and you see someone and think, He's really handsome. Then he puts on his clothes. Some weird pants. A thumb ring. Some weird socks. And it's gone!” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

Page 2: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

“I find people better looking without clothes than with clothes. You can go to a gym and go to a steam room and you see someone and think, He's really handsome. Then he puts on his clothes. Some weird pants. A thumb ring. Some weird socks. And it's gone!”-Tom Ford, Vanity Fair, March 2006

Page 3: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

Objectification of Women?

Do these women appear to be in positions of power or submission? Is nudity

necessarily degrading?

Page 4: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?
Page 5: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

F/W 2009

F/W 2012 Campaign

Page 6: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

“I’m an equal-opportunity objectifier…I’m sorry, I don’t understand why our culture both worships and objectifies beauty, and then slams those of us who participate in it. Because I make that detachment, I’m capable of objectifying a beautiful woman, but that doesn’t demean her in any way. She’s beautiful because she’s a creature who exists physically, in the physical world, who happens to be in a moment of prime.”-Tom Ford, Interview Magazine 2011

"With a more natural relationship to nudity, we might also be freed up to find each other a lot more fascinating. There's an equality to being naked; the fewer clothes and accessories a person wears the less you judge them, and the more you notice their truest traits, like their eyes or their charisma, their great hands or their one-of-a-kind hair or, most importantly, their personality and character. As much as I love clothing, it gives us one more layer to hide behind.”-Tom Ford, New York Magazine 2008

Page 7: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

"As much as I've tried, it has been consistently harder to get images of nude men onto magazine pages and billboards than it has nude women. In a society where images of brutal violence are consumed during breakfast, the male nude is one of our last taboos. There's a double standard at play here: magazines that are happy to fund ads featuring an artfully lit female nude will balk at an image of her male counterpart.”-Tom Ford, New York Magazine 2008

"Women have long been objectified in our society; images of beautiful female forms are everywhere. Go to a dinner party and women are wearing tiny dresses, exposing their legs and baring their toes in high-heeled sandals. They're basically naked, with a little bit of draping over their body. Think of how tough it must be to be a woman in our culture. Women are constantly judged by their bodies and the size of their breasts.”-Tom Ford, New York Magazine 2008

Page 8: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

Racist?

Erykah BaduAfrican-American

Jon KortajarenaSpanish

Beyoncé KnowlesAfrican-American

You Decide.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQAS7mBadkE

Page 9: Controversy+Exclusivity=Success?

Conclusion

• Controversial? Admittedly so.• Objectification? Equal objectivity. • Racist? Not for lack of minority

models.• Offensive? Relative.• Banned? Not yet.• What are your thoughts?