Some cool celebrities without clothes images:
Tricia as a Manga Character - using The Face Transfomer
Image by Tricia Wang çå£æ· I just watched Epic Fu's great episode, which included a piece on The Face Transfomer. Beyond thinking that the Face Transfomer is cool, I started thinking about the social meaning behind this exercise. Here I am pretending to be an âAfro-Carriabeanâ - wtf? I mean cool yes, sure, I want to see what I look like as a manga character and am curious to see what I look like as a black person, but there was something odd about trying on different races. Literally. What does it mean for race relations and conceptions when we feel that we can freely try on different races? Have we become so comfortable with race that we can play around with it like shopping for clothing? I am always really sensitive when people say that a person acts like a certain race or culture. Itâs almost akin to imaginatively being another race - kinda like what we are doing with Face Transfomer. And you know I actually hear this verbal exchange most often among my white and black or latino friends. Iâve heard a black person say to a white person, âyou know so much about black culture that you are black or at least must have been black in a past life.â Now I find that on one end to be a compliment, that the white person is accepted as part of the black community, but on the other end I find it difficult to swallow as a form of compliment because most often it is white people who have the most latitude to be absorbed into another race or cultural group. You donât usually hear the reverse, that a white person will say to a black person, âwow you know so much about black culture that you are actually white!â It's like you hear in the movies where they say to white people, you can always come into our part of town, but we will never be allowed to come into yours. For dominant groups, like Caucasians in the US, race can be an after thought so itâs almost like a novelty to pretend for a moment that one is another race or ethnicity. For people who look anything other than white in Western countries, there isnât as much freedom to forget oneâs skin color because they are reminded of it (usually negatively) in their daily interactions with institutions and people. In particular, for non-whites, being a certain race or ethnicity can be a complicated process of accepting ones skin color and coming to terms with the popular (mis)conceptions of oneâs race or ethnic group. A lot of times, this entails the imagination of being white before a full embracement of oneâs race or heritage. For a time period when I was a teenager raised in an all white upper-class community, I wished I was white so badly so that I wouldn't have to deal with the racist jaunts by my classmates. And so here I am, trying on a "West-Indian" face. Kinda surreal. Now do I really want to imagine what it is like to look like an Indian female, let's say in the US? or in India? and from what class? what is my migration history? or was I born here? My point is that being another race is more than just trying it on for a few seconds digitally, but some how we've reduced it down to just that and I wonder if this novelty is an indicator of that we're comfortable with race or that we're just dealing with race in a more post-modern removed and techno-mediated way. And you know it's usually people who are more affluent who have the opportunity become the "other," to learn about another culture and to transplant themselves into another ethnic groupâs cultural world. So jokes made to white people like âwow you know so much about my culture, you must be Mexicanâ just make me uncomfortable because thereâs a certain level of privilege that comes with learning about another âculture.â The fact that I make time and spend money to learn Spanish because I find the language beautiful and useful for my academic interests in Mexican migration is a privilege. Now it is a privilege that I embrace and am not embarrassed of and make no apologies for, but at the same time I am quite aware of my social position to even be able to learn another language more out of interest and less out of need. So back to Face Transformer - does this mean America is comfortable with race (and manga, chimps and euro painters j/k) if we can freely try on different races? And what does this say about race when we can collapse large groups of people together into general categories? In Face Transformers all the blacks, Caribbeans and Africans are grouped into the afro-caribbean category, and all Asians are collapsed into the East-Asian category and I think the West Indian group is not referring to people from the West Indies but Indians and Middle-Easterners. This is an odd form of racial reductionism. And where are the Latinos â" where do they fit in this? And Inuits? Iâve always kept a tab on these Face Transformer-like sites and I think the fun in trying these online sites out is an expression of an underlying desire to temporarily imagine another physical body without fully committing to that body/face. And the kinds of changes rendered by these online sites point to a greater cultural obsession or letâs say anxiety with that rendering. So for Face Transfomers we could say this is an obsession with race and euro paintings:) Oh and with age also â" you can chose to be a young adult, baby, teenager and old person. One of the predecessors to Face Transformers was My Heritage and I wrote about the social meaning behind that too 2 years ago when it launched. So instead of transforming into a race or chimp, like Face Transformer, you can transform yourself into a celebrity and see which one you most closely resemble. So this points to an obsession with celebrities. Well after my social diagnosis I think I will upload another picture on Face Transformer and see what I look like as a Male. Hmmm perhaps I have an underlying anxiety with switching genders? Well did anyone have these thoughts when they uploaded a face on Face Transfomer? oh and one thing that I definitely learned is that I don't like good as a Caucasian! Good thing that I embrace my Chinese face! you can do your own face at their site at The Face Transfomer
Tricia as Botticelli - using The Face Transfomer
Image by Tricia Wang çå£æ· I just watched Epic Fu's great episode, which included a piece on The Face Transfomer. Beyond thinking that the Face Transfomer is cool, I started thinking about the social meaning behind this exercise. Here I am pretending to be an âAfro-Carriabeanâ - wtf? I mean cool yes, sure, I want to see what I look like as a manga character and am curious to see what I look like as a black person, but there was something odd about trying on different races. Literally. What does it mean for race relations and conceptions when we feel that we can freely try on different races? Have we become so comfortable with race that we can play around with it like shopping for clothing? I am always really sensitive when people say that a person acts like a certain race or culture. Itâs almost akin to imaginatively being another race - kinda like what we are doing with Face Transfomer. And you know I actually hear this verbal exchange most often among my white and black or latino friends. Iâve heard a black person say to a white person, âyou know so much about black culture that you are black or at least must have been black in a past life.â Now I find that on one end to be a compliment, that the white person is accepted as part of the black community, but on the other end I find it difficult to swallow as a form of compliment because most often it is white people who have the most latitude to be absorbed into another race or cultural group. You donât usually hear the reverse, that a white person will say to a black person, âwow you know so much about black culture that you are actually white!â It's like you hear in the movies where they say to white people, you can always come into our part of town, but we will never be allowed to come into yours. For dominant groups, like Caucasians in the US, race can be an after thought so itâs almost like a novelty to pretend for a moment that one is another race or ethnicity. For people who look anything other than white in Western countries, there isnât as much freedom to forget oneâs skin color because they are reminded of it (usually negatively) in their daily interactions with institutions and people. In particular, for non-whites, being a certain race or ethnicity can be a complicated process of accepting ones skin color and coming to terms with the popular (mis)conceptions of oneâs race or ethnic group. A lot of times, this entails the imagination of being white before a full embracement of oneâs race or heritage. For a time period when I was a teenager raised in an all white upper-class community, I wished I was white so badly so that I wouldn't have to deal with the racist jaunts by my classmates. And so here I am, trying on a "West-Indian" face. Kinda surreal. Now do I really want to imagine what it is like to look like an Indian female, let's say in the US? or in India? and from what class? what is my migration history? or was I born here? My point is that being another race is more than just trying it on for a few seconds digitally, but some how we've reduced it down to just that and I wonder if this novelty is an indicator of that we're comfortable with race or that we're just dealing with race in a more post-modern removed and techno-mediated way. And you know it's usually people who are more affluent who have the opportunity become the "other," to learn about another culture and to transplant themselves into another ethnic groupâs cultural world. So jokes made to white people like âwow you know so much about my culture, you must be Mexicanâ just make me uncomfortable because thereâs a certain level of privilege that comes with learning about another âculture.â The fact that I make time and spend money to learn Spanish because I find the language beautiful and useful for my academic interests in Mexican migration is a privilege. Now it is a privilege that I embrace and am not embarrassed of and make no apologies for, but at the same time I am quite aware of my social position to even be able to learn another language more out of interest and less out of need. So back to Face Transformer - does this mean America is comfortable with race (and manga, chimps and euro painters j/k) if we can freely try on different races? And what does this say about race when we can collapse large groups of people together into general categories? In Face Transformers all the blacks, Caribbeans and Africans are grouped into the afro-caribbean category, and all Asians are collapsed into the East-Asian category and I think the West Indian group is not referring to people from the West Indies but Indians and Middle-Easterners. This is an odd form of racial reductionism. And where are the Latinos â" where do they fit in this? And Inuits? Iâve always kept a tab on these Face Transformer-like sites and I think the fun in trying these online sites out is an expression of an underlying desire to temporarily imagine another physical body without fully committing to that body/face. And the kinds of changes rendered by these online sites point to a greater cultural obsession or letâs say anxiety with that rendering. So for Face Transfomers we could say this is an obsession with race and euro paintings:) Oh and with age also â" you can chose to be a young adult, baby, teenager and old person. One of the predecessors to Face Transformers was My Heritage and I wrote about the social meaning behind that too 2 years ago when it launched. So instead of transforming into a race or chimp, like Face Transformer, you can transform yourself into a celebrity and see which one you most closely resemble. So this points to an obsession with celebrities. Well after my social diagnosis I think I will upload another picture on Face Transformer and see what I look like as a Male. Hmmm perhaps I have an underlying anxiety with switching genders? Well did anyone have these thoughts when they uploaded a face on Face Transfomer? oh and one thing that I definitely learned is that I don't like good as a Caucasian! Good thing that I embrace my Chinese face! you can do your own face at their site at The Face Transfomer