Sunday, March 7, 2010

Masked By Cosmetics


Am I pretty when I wake up?
Why is life so darn rough?
We apply makeup after our coffee cup
And still never feel worthy enough
A Superficial exterior
Paints a societal norm
But how do we feel on the interior?
As if we have to fit a form
By the middle of the day
The ritual of reapplying is to stay
But who’s to say?
Natural beauty should convey
Females are not masked
Behind cosmetics everyday

-Erika Wolkoff

Read Between the Lines

“Erase Wrinkles…”

“Flatten Your Tummy by Summer…"

“Everyone Can Look Cool…”

“Buy Perfume…”

“Sexy Hair in a Snap…”

“Glam…”

If all of these women can look like this…why can’t I? What is wrong with me? Do I not dress well enough? Am I not toned enough? How do I become glamorous?

Why do I need all of this?


-Paige Eulate

Walk of Shame




"...Shoes are a girl's best friend...You can never have too many shoes...I love to buy shoes because they always fit..."
Walk a mile in my shoes and you may start to wonder why these uncomfortable annoyances are my best friend. Why breaking the bank, stuffing the closet, and constantly trying to keep up is never enough. And why changing myself into someone else's image is my perfect fit.

-Karen Hynes

Pills Make Sense (CENTS)



After almost 50 years on the market, the "Pill" continues to be one of the most popular and effective forms of birth control. More than 18 million women in the United States rely on it every month to prevent pregnancy. The problem? Recent research shows many young women ignore the fine print on oral contraceptive packaging, missing important facts about this form of birth control that every woman should know.

-Elizabeth Lugviel

Artist Statement

"to the maXX," is a reflection of women and their associated stereotypes, and how these stereotypes are generated via consumerism. As a group of four females, we noticed that many of our experiences were similar and harbored a sense of importance to us. From infancy, consumerism displays gender specific roles that have been laid out for us years in advance. Advertisements tell us to play with toy kitchenettes and makeup. We grow up with the expectation that we will be ballerinas, stay-at-home moms, and secretaries.

Each individual photograph is meant to display a different aspect of women-targeted consumerism and the insecurities that come with it from a woman's perspective. Out title in itself conveys a woman's point of view by the capitalization of the "XX," which is representative of the two X chromosomes each woman has, and that links us as a gender. Additionally, titling our blog "to the maXX," also incorporates the need to buy in excess, a trend we are seeing more and more often. Now not only are women being told what role to play and what items to buy, but that the more they have, the more successful they will be in their quest to become that "ideal beauty."

This pressure that women constantly feel to internalize the world's perfection can often serve as a driving force, propelling them into scrutinizing and fixing. They buy products that claim to fix it and continue to criticize themselves until they feel that the flaw in manageable. While the majority of can examine themselves and carry on with their lives, the pressure can be detrimental and dangerous for some. Every day we are witnesses to a multitude of advertisements regarding depression, news stories about eating disorders and even death, conditions that are easily linked to self-image. Perhaps if the world were less focused on playing the part of the ideal female, we would see a decrease in these issues.

Our photographs allow our topic to come full circle as they display a different aspect of the pressures women face from today's consumerism. The magazines and shoes are representative of the mounting struggle to attain all that is deemed acceptable for us to own. The photograph featuring the makeup shows the process of transforming into society's ideal and how we internalize that by what we see in the mirror and in everyday life. Lastly, the pills represent how we manage both our feelings and our image.