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    Categories: Culturelife

Male-Grooming Business Is Booming And Suggests That Men’s Make-Up May Finally Be Going Mainstream

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David Beckham is set to appear on the cover of

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LOVE 20.5, in Dior, featuring green rose and bird tattoos twisting up his neck thanks to stylist Kim Jones. Says make-up artist Miranda Joyce, “With the lighting and the pose, David reminded me of David Sylvian from [1970s and ‘80s band] Japan. It seemed right to add eye make-up, the bright blue that Bowie wore in the Life on Mars video. I knew David could make it work, even though it wasn’t something he’d done before.”

But what has people talking is not the fact that Beckham is appearing in a style magazine but his eyeshadow.

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Although men have been using make-up for centuries (e.g. Alexander the Great, the wigs and beauty spots during the reign of Louis XIII, etc.), sometime in the 1800s the idea that men don’t wear make-up took root. While stars such as Bowie, Prince, and Johnny Depp did wear make-up, it was more in the spirit of social defiance than a means to just look good.

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But with Beckham appearing on the cover of LOVE, the question arises if men’s make-up is starting to go mainstream.

Already, Chanel and Tom Ford have launched men’s cosmetic lines and male make-up artists Manny Gutierrez and James Charles feature in the marketing campaigns of Maybelline and Covergirl, respectively.

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Answering the question of why facial decoration is an idea that has traditionally met much resistance among men, Glen Jankowski, a lecturer in the School of Social Sciences at Leeds Beckett University, says, “Well, they’re told to be.point 201 |

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Despite claims of increasing metrosexuality, gender norms for men are still strong.point 72 | Analyses of toys marketed to boys, for example, show that the messages are still to be strong, brave and uninvested in your appearance.point 185 | For girls, beauty is key.point 206 |

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However, the trend appears to be steadily shifting. In 2017, the male-grooming business was valued at $57.7 billion. But Research and Markets project that by 2023, the market will reach $78.6 billion. And this isn’t just a little Nivea cream applied here and there. The market encompasses products such as moisturizing foundation and bronzers, concealers, and brow definers, items that are considered proper cosmetics.

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LGBT activist Jeffrey Ingold says, “Masculinity is still such a fragile concept; the fact that Beckham wearing eyeliner is headline news shows how little things have changed. Suicide rates among young men are alarmingly high and part of the [reason for that] is the culture of toxic masculinity that restricts what’s acceptable for men to do. Not feeling you can be yourself is incredibly damaging to a person’s mental well-being.”

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But with more men experimenting with their appearance, Ingold says that it could be a sign that we’re expanding the idea of “what it means to be a man.point 239 |

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” And Miranda Joyce agrees, saying, “While gender fluidity is in the spotlight, we’re still a patriarchal society.point 103 | Beckham in make-up communicates a certain liberation from the norm; he’s a sportsman and a businessman and a style leader and, on the cover, I think he personifies modern masculinity, confident to step out of his comfort zone and experiment.point 307 |

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