Thursday 1 November 2012

CCDN 231, Assignment 3 Write up


Richard Hpa
CCDN 231
300226122
Tutor: Philippa Shipley


Glamour. It is defined on thefreedictionary.com as ‘an air of compelling charm, romance, and excitement, especially when delusively alluring’. But glamour is not something that can be strictly defined. It all depends on the viewer. In an extract from the book ‘Glamour: Women, History, Feminism’ written by Carol Dyhouse (2011) she states ‘glamour (like beauty) can be judged to exist in the eye of the beholder rather that which is beholden’ (pg1). She is ultimately saying that something that might be glamorous to one person might not be to another. But I believe that there is one thing, which is always glamorous to everyone, themselves. Everybody in his or her own way finds himself or herself glamorous. And I wanted to create an experience which focus’s on the aspect of self-glamour.
                                                                                               
The idea of self-glamour is something that can be involved with everybody. There are times in everyone’s life where (no matter what they look like) they find themselves glamorous’ In a Journal Article written by Carol S. Gould (2005) titled ‘Glamour as an Aesthetic Property of Person’. She states that ‘Glamour, I argue here, is this sort of personal quality’ (pg. 237).  What Gould is saying is that glamour all depends on the person. That glamour is personal and no one person can define what is glamorous and what is not. When reading that quote it gave me the sense that everyone is glamorous in his or her own way. So if everyone were to think of him or herself as ‘glamorous’, then this experience would emphasize that idea. Another quote which I found that that strengthens the last one was in ‘The Times UK’ Newspaper, this article written by Joan Collins (2006) states ‘Glamour has a lot to do with attitude and poise -the internal virtues’ (pg57).

Quotes like what was written by Dyhouse, Gould and Collins are the reason why I did this experience. In all three quotes they do not mention anything about looks but more of a ‘personal’ or ‘internal’ feel to glamour. All these quotes support each other which states that there are a lot of people believe that glamour isn’t just all about beauty. Making an experience that makes everyone feel glamorous has to not involve things that are gold and glittery, or are which I myself consider glamorous, but things, which I believe that everyone finds glamorous.

The Inspirations for my experience came from the 1937 Disney film Snow White directed by David Hand. The main thing that inspired me to do this experience is the magic mirror where it will tell you who the fairest person of them all is. I am planning on taking that part of the film and twisting it a bit to suit my experience of making someone feel glamorous. Like all of the Disney Princess’s, Snow White was shown to be extremely beautiful and glamorous. Snow White is a film that a lot of people have watched during their childhood. Many girls in their childhood have often dreamt about being like Snow White and being ‘the most fairest of them all’. So especially for girls I hope that my experience would bring back a sort of nostalgia from when they were a child, where they would dress up as princesses and make themselves as glamorous as they could be.

My experience was designed to make the user feel glamorous by projecting a live video feed to them onto a mirror. At first the mirror had just written on it, ‘Mirror, mirror on the wall, who’s the most glamorous of them all’. When the user presses the spacebar on the computer, then the words rippled like it were a pool of water and then fade to the live feed of them. I believe that my experiment was a success and all the users enjoyed the experience, and they were all quite mesmerized by it. This links in very well with a quote in Elizabeth Wilson’s (2007) entry titled ‘A Note on Glamour’ written in the Journal ‘Fashion Theory: The Journal of Dress, Body & Culture’, She stated that in the eighteenth century glamour was described as ‘when devils, wizards or jugglers deceive the sight, they are said to cast a glamour over the eyes of the spectator’ (pg96). The experience was not designed to focus on just one person but for anyone to participate in.

While the users were participating in my experience I was recording them from a camera, which was placed next to the mirror, so I could record their reactions to what they saw on the mirror. I recorded 4 different people and in all four cases they were all surprised by the outcome of my experience. When spoken to after the camera finished recording the users stated that it was quite beautiful and quite memorizing. And according to ‘Glamour: Making it Modern’ by Michael Lassell (2009), ‘One could, at one time, speak of being ‘under a glamour’, as being under a spell or enraptured’ (pg8). Two of the testers said that they could not keep their eyes off the screen because they were surprised at what was happening.

In the end I believe my experience was a success and that it did create a glamorous feeling to the user. The response to my experience was positive and was linked real close to some of the quotes which I got, especially Lassell’s quote from Glamour: Making it Modern, which pretty much linked perfectly with the responses. This experience worked exactly as I had planned it to and I am really happy with the outcome


References:

Gould C S (2005). ‘Glamour as an Aesthetic Property of Person’. The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. 63(3), 237-247.

Collins, J. (2006, April 22). Glamour: [final edition]. The Times. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com.helicon.vuw.ac.nz/docview/319504665

Extract from Dyhouse, C. (2011) Glamour: Women, History, Feminism. London: Zed Books.

Wilson, E. (2007). A Note on Glamour. Fashion Theory: The Journal of Dress, Body & Culture. 11 (1), p95-108.

Lassell, M (2009). Glamour: Making it Modern. New York: Filipacchi Publishing.

Hand, D. (Director). (1937). Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs . [Motion Picture], United States: Walt Disney Productions







Words count: 930

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