Video: The dark side of the life of Barbie dolls: debauchery, murder and everything, like people
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
Marielle Clayton is a self-taught photographer known for her passion for killing and mocking Barbie dolls in every possible way. The photo artist creates a separate world where dolls live a wild life, do terrible things, and Clayton seems to be peeping at them and catching in his lens just those moments that the dolls themselves would want to leave away from prying eyes.
"Barbie dolls were conceived as a model of a woman, to which all girls in the world would aspire, and whom men around them would passionately desire. The way their figure looks, blonde hair, thin waist, protruding breasts - all this is such an ideal of a woman that transforms girls into a piece of meat, without any personality - says Mariel Clayton (Mariel Clayton). - And yet in real life, the percentage of women who would really look like a Barbie is incredibly small. which actually has no genitals."
Some time ago, we already published another project by Marielle Clayton, in which the photographer turned Barbie the bloodthirsty killer.
Recommended:
What Barbie's friends and rivals look like: Manga heroine, Muslim woman and other fashion dolls from different countries
One Barbie doll is sold every second in the world, hundreds of thousands of collectors are ready to shell out big money for limited and vintage Matell creations, and the blonde fashionista herself has become a real symbol of modern culture. But she was never alone - all over the world, starting from the 1960s, there are more and more of her competitors … or future girlfriends? Some of them disappear as soon as they appear, while others threaten to oust the impudent American woman from the regional markets
Why "dragons" and giant kangaroos that lived side by side with people became extinct in Australia
The already amazing nature of Australia tens of thousands of years ago was even more incredible. The continent was inhabited by giant kangaroos, twice the height of an ordinary person, and huge goannas, similar to dragons. But why did the megafauna disappear on this earth? Previously, it was believed that people were to blame. Now scientists are sure: it was climate change that led Australia's megafauna to extinction. The land that we now call Australia, 40-60 thousand years ago, was inhabited by giant creatures sa
New forms of Barbie: three new dolls made Barbie closer to people
After many years, when girls all over the world tried to be like Barbie, the time has finally come when the doll itself began to strive to be like people. After 57 years, since the first Barbie hit store shelves, the doll has finally taken on more human forms. Three new dolls are now available - Tall Barbie, Petite and Body Barbie
"Everything flows, everything changes". Ephemeral beauty in the work of Nicole Dextras
Artist Nicole Dextras is very fond of working with clothes, but she does it in very unusual ways. For example, her work is highly dependent on the time of year and the weather outside. If it's summer, then Nicole goes to the garden, where she picks up weeds and turns them into beautiful dresses. If it is winter outside, the artist takes ready-made clothes and … freezes them in blocks of ice. It's worth seeing, isn't it?
The Dark Side of French Bohemian Life at the Turn of the Century: Tea and Morphine: Women in Paris, 1880 - 1914
When we think of female images in 19th-century painting, the first to come to mind is the imposing matrons Mary Cassatt, spending leisure hours over a cup of tea or enjoying an afternoon exercise. But much darker scenes from the lives of those women for whom such a thing as "leisure hours" did not exist at all appeared in abundance on the canvases of artists