Body Paint
Painting the face and body became another psychedelic trip of the
60s. Mod model Twiggy added a famous flower
eye to her look, and suddenly everyone wanted to use the body as a
canvas.
This was no slapdash finger-painting, however - Twiggy's flower
eye was a careful artistic work, with painted petals and false
eyelashes framing her doe-eyes. Makeup as an artistic tool changed
the face of cosmetics: makeup wasn't just to prettify, it was to
electrify.
The hippies (as is their wont) went a
step further, trading in their clothes for body paint. Flowers, peace
symbols, smiley faces: bodies
became a living canvas for the art of the new groovy lifestyle.
Shops like London's Lady Jayne would hand paint a one-of-a-kind
dress or necklace on customers as they waited. No more spending all
day in the fitting rooms and walking out unhappy. Artists were on
hand to create your very own fashion statement, tailored to you.
A forerunner of the tattoo, body paint allowed you to share your
message and joy with the world. While body paint would never take
the place of clothes in conservative circles, painting became an
exciting accessory to already psychedelic fashions.
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