Compacts and Cosmetics
eBook - ePub

Compacts and Cosmetics

Beauty from Victorian Times to the Present Day

Madeleine Marsh

  1. 256 Seiten
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

Compacts and Cosmetics

Beauty from Victorian Times to the Present Day

Madeleine Marsh

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Buchvorschau
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Quellenangaben

Über dieses Buch

A delightfully illustrated history of makeup and the beauty business. Cosmetics go all the way back to ancient times. In this book, an expert in vintage accessories tells the story of beauty products from the nineteenth century to the present, revealing how both makeup and the women who wear it have changed. Madeleine Marsh also delves into the subject of compacts, which have been a symbol of love for generations and are often beautiful works of art in themselves, worthy of collecting. And in addition to fascinating historical facts and gorgeous illustrations, she shares tips on what to buy and where, what to spot when buying, and how to make the most of your compacts, vintage cosmetics, or beauty accessories.

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Information

Jahr
2009
ISBN
9781783408634

CHAPTER ONE

The Foundation of Make-up

Beauty in the Ancient World


FROM THE DAWN of time men and women have decorated their bodies. Prehistoric peoples painted and scarified the skin to indicate tribal allegiance, to scare their enemies, and honour their gods but the first recorded use of make-up for pleasure derives from Ancient Egypt.

Egypt

The Egyptians pioneered the development of cosmetics and fragrances. They lived and died surrounded by kohl jars, make-up boxes, perfume vials and polished metal mirrors, all of which were buried with them to provide eternal beauty in the afterlife. They painted their eyes, rouged their lips, spent hours arranging their hairstyles, and many of the time-consuming grooming practises that we take for granted today were established four thousand years ago on the banks of the Nile.

Depilation and Moisturising

A smooth skin was highly prized and body hair was removed with pumice stones, tweezers, and bronze razors, all of which have been found in tombs. The Hearst Medical Papyrus (a list of cures and remedies inscribed in the second millennium BC) recommended a concoction of heated lard, insect droppings and boiled bird bones as a wax depilatory, or more simply suggested rubbing the offending hair with blood from the vulva of a female greyhound.
In a harsh, hot climate moisturising the body was practised by every class. When Howard Carter opened up Tutankhamen’s tomb in 1922, he discovered sealed jars containing traces of scented skin cream that was still fragrant after 3,000 years. At the other end of the social scale, during the reign of Rameses III when the tomb builders of Deir el-Medina laid down tools (one of history’s first recorded strikes), a major cause of their pioneering industrial action was the non-supply of castor and sesame oils, which were an agreed part of their monthly rations and essential for keeping the skin supple in desert conditions.

Eye paint and Face make-up

Make-up was used both for prophylactic and decorative purposes.Thick lines of eye paint helped protect the eyes from the sun’s glare and powdered kohl was also included in eye medicines. Worn by both men and women,eye paint came in two main colours – green made from malachite (copper carbonate) and black from galena (lead sulphide). Ingredients were ground on a cosmetic palette, mixed with oil or water, then applied to the eyes either with the fingers or a kohl pencil – a slim stick sometimes with a small mixing spoon or spatula at one end. Kohl pots came in a range of styles from small alabaster boxes to long slender glass tubes,and containers were often decorated with the image of Bes – protector of the household, pregnant women and children, and the deity associated with pleasure. Decorating the eyes also had a symbolic value, simulating the eye of Horus (the falcon god) and providing a protective amulet against the evil eye.
Yellow ochre paint was used to lighten the skin (men also used a darker orange tone); red ochre was powdered to rouge the lips and cheeks. The Turin Erotic Papyrus – the Ancient Egyptian equivalent of a girlie magazine and a monument to human athleticism and sexual invention during the Rameses’ period (1292-1075BC) – includes the illustration of a female nude, straddling a vast phallus whilst calmly painting her mouth; lip brush in one hand, mirror and cosmetic tube in the other. Like Twentieth Century pin-ups, even if you had no clothes on, you needed to be sure that your make-up was flawless.

Skin Decoration and Tattooing

Henna was used to tint fingernails and decorate the skin; more permanent markings were provided by puncture tattooing. According to evidence from mummies and statuettes, tattooing appears to have been largely restricted to women including dancers and concubines. Geometric designs were inked on the body (often around the stomach area) whilst the inner thigh was tattooed with representations of Bes, a good luck charm whether you wanted to ward off sexual disease or ensure a safe labour.

Hair care

Henna also served to colour the hair and medical papyri included numerous recipes for hair dyes and scalp treatments. Donkey liver, or a cooked mouse – left to rot then mixed with lard – provided a salve that would prevent greyness. Another remedy suggested strengthening the hair with the juice of a black lizard boiled in oil, whilst baldness could be cured with a pomade of fat extracted from the lion, the hippo, the crocodile, the tomcat, the snake and the Nubian ibex.
Small wonder perhaps that shaving the head was a popular alternative.‘The priests shave themselves all over their body every other day, so that no lice or any other foul thing may come to be upon them when they minister to the gods,’ observed the Fifth Century BC Greek historian Herodotus.
At various periods civilian men, and women too, shaved their heads, resorting to elaborate wigs that could be styled and beeswaxed into the latest fashionable shapes. Another artificial favourite was a long and slender false beard worn by both male and female pharaohs as a symbol of status.Tomb paintings show ladies supporting cones of fat upon their heads, which according to one explanation were designed to melt as the evening progressed, thus moisturising their wigs. A less messy theory was that these cones were a hieroglyphic symbol, indicating that their hairpieces were richly perfumed.

Perfume

Fragrance was used for both cosmetic and religious purposes. The word perfume comes from the Latin per fumum: through smoke. Across the Ancient World incense was burnt in temples to appease the gods, to raise the soul to the heavens and to conceal the all too earthy smells of sacrificed flesh and an unwashed congregation. Perfume was inseparable from love, life and death. As Shakespeare tells it Cleopatra seduced Mark Antony on a barge with scented purple sails ‘so perfumùd that the winds were love-sick with them’. Corpses were embalmed with myrrh and cassia and wrapped in scented bandages both as a symbol of eternity and to preserve the body from putrefaction.

Ancient Greece

Perfume and cosmetics (often imported from Egypt and the Far East) spread across the Mediterranean. In Athens, women rouged their cheeks with cinnabar (red mercury sulphide) and blanched their complexions with powdered white lead, products which as the Roman naturalist Pliny observed were ‘deadly poisons’. Despite persistent warnings, lead continued to be used in cosmetics until well into the Nineteenth Century and from deadly nightshade – used in ancient times to dilate the pupils (hence its Italian name belladonna: beautiful lady) – to modern day botox (smoothing out wrinkles with botulinus toxin), poisonous substances have remained a constituent of make-up.
It wasn’t just women who were dying to be beautiful. In Athens, a culture that venerated the male body, moisturising the skin was an important part of the masculine bathing process, as described by the poet Antiphanes in the Fourth Century BC.
‘He really bathes
In a large gilded tub, and steeps his feet
And legs in rich Egyptian unguents;
His neck and chest he rubs with oil of palm
And both his arms with extract of sweet mint,
His eyebrows and his hair with Marjoram,
His knees and face with essence of ground thyme.’
Socrates rejected such perfumed foppery declaring that the only scent a man needed was ‘nobility of soul’and in warlike Sparta cosmetics and fragrances were banned.

Rome

Warlike Rome however embraced them with enthusiasm. In his Natural History (77AD), Pliny noted with disgust that soldiers had taken to wearing perfume underneath their helmets and that even the standards and eagles of the Legions, the emblems of Roman power across the world, were steeped in scented oils, providing a fragrant symbol of ‘our state of extreme corruptness’.
Pliny criticised the vast amounts of money wasted on cosmetic unguents, the most fugitive and as such ‘the most superfluous’of luxuries. Nero was famous for his love of expensive fragrances, even perfuming (reports Pliny despairingly) the soles of his feet.Silver pipes were installed in the imperial palace to spray visitors with rosewater and on one occasion the emperor spent a fortune on a waterfall of rose petals, that smothered and killed one of his guests. Nero’s wife (and former mistress) Poppaea Sabina was said to bathe daily in milk from her personal herd of 500 asses, and devised her own pomatums to guard against wrinkles.
Roman matrons covered themselves in make-up. In Book III of Ars Amatoria (The Art of Love) the Roman poet Ovid offered frank advice to women on every subject from how to fake an orgasm (‘don’t betray yourself by over-acting’) to personal grooming.
Roman glass bottle for oil and cosmetics dating from the First or Second Century, AD.
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Roman lead frame for a hand mirror.
West African bronze kohl stick and tazolt kohl stone. Tazolt is a stone found in Taoudeni (700 Kms North of Timbuktu). When scratched with a stick,or ground to a powder it creates natural kohl or eye make-up. The Tuareg people have used tazolt for centuries and well as being worn by women it is traditionally used by ‘Marabouts’ ( Islamic leaders and scholars) to protect their eyes from the sun whilst studying religious texts.
e9781783408634_i0009.webp
Stinking armpits and bristly legs were, he emphasised, to be avoided at all cost. Chalk was recommended for whitening the skin, carmine for pinking the cheeks and powdered ash and saffron for emphasising the eyes. If you were not fortunate enough to have a mono-brow (much prized in Ancient Rome and Greece) Ovid suggests inking one in; similarly thin hair could be rectified by wigs; and patches could be used to conceal spots and blemishes. As far as Ovid was concerned there was nothing at all wrong with make-up and artificial embellishments, so long as they were applied in secret:
‘On no account let your lover find you with a lot of “aids to beauty” boxes about you. The art that adorns you should be unsuspected
 Let your servants tell us you are still asleep, if we arrive before your toilet is finished. You will appear all the lovelier when you’ve put on the finishing touch. Why should I know what it is that makes your skin so white? Keep your door shut,and don’t let me see the work before it’s finished.There are a whole host of things we men should know nothing about.’
Whereas in Ancient Egypt men and women alike showed off their cosmetic accessories and revelled in obviously artificial make-up and false hair; the beauties of Rome were expected to ‘appear’ natural and were mocked if they were caught out.
‘You dye you hair, but never will you dye your old age 
 Never will rouge or white paint turn Hecuba into Helen,’ warned the Second Century Greek writer Lucian. ‘Your hair was made far away and at night you put away your teeth in the same manner as your silks. You lie stored away in a hundred little cosmetic boxes – your face doesn’t even sleep with you,’ sneered the poet Martial in his epigrams. Even the liberal Ovid had no patience with men who experimented with make-up. ‘Don’t, for heaven...

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  1. Dedication
  2. Title Page
  3. Acknowledgements
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Table of Contents
  6. Introduction
  7. CHAPTER ONE - The Foundation of Make-up
  8. CHAPTER TWO - Unpainted Ladies
  9. CHAPTER THREE - Actresses, Mistresses, and Suffragettes
  10. CHAPTER FOUR - Put on a Pretty Face
  11. CHAPTER FIVE - Hooray for Hollywood
  12. CHAPTER SIX - On the Art Deco Dressing Table
  13. CHAPTER SEVEN - War Paint
  14. CHAPTER EIGHT - Immaculate Grooming
  15. CHAPTER NINE - Swinging Make-up
  16. CHAPTER TEN - Glam Men and Hairy Women
  17. CHAPTER ELEVEN - Material Girls and Boys
  18. CHAPTER TWELVE - Bling, Botox or the Burqa?
  19. APPENDIX - Buying Beauty
  20. Bibliography
  21. Index
Zitierstile fĂŒr Compacts and Cosmetics

APA 6 Citation

Marsh, M. (2009). Compacts and Cosmetics ([edition unavailable]). Pen and Sword. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/2441587/compacts-and-cosmetics-beauty-from-victorian-times-to-the-present-day-pdf (Original work published 2009)

Chicago Citation

Marsh, Madeleine. (2009) 2009. Compacts and Cosmetics. [Edition unavailable]. Pen and Sword. https://www.perlego.com/book/2441587/compacts-and-cosmetics-beauty-from-victorian-times-to-the-present-day-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Marsh, M. (2009) Compacts and Cosmetics. [edition unavailable]. Pen and Sword. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/2441587/compacts-and-cosmetics-beauty-from-victorian-times-to-the-present-day-pdf (Accessed: 15 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Marsh, Madeleine. Compacts and Cosmetics. [edition unavailable]. Pen and Sword, 2009. Web. 15 Oct. 2022.