Feminable Fashionism
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Collage by Monika Mogi.
Being 19, Vice Style contributor Anna Ryon gets to spend a substantial amount of her time on various bits of the internet, where other teens girls and female students spend a lot of time, which is useful when you're a guy who doesn't. Anna recently mailed in her observation that the internet zines and blogs that girls are looking to for style pointers right now, seem to be focused on a mix of ultra-girly aesthetics and a sort of vague feminist consciousness. It's less angry and hairy than it is determined to enjoy being a girl in a way that revolves around something other than 'getting the red carpet/catwalk look'. Though the hairy armpits are back. Listed below are some of the girls and sites she's talking about.
Everybody I spoke to kept telling me that Grace Miceli was a big deal, so I decided to check her out. She is a Vermont-based artist who makes coloring books and sticker sheets she sells off her site, various bits of internet art, and weird videos of her and her friends dancing in wigs with stickers on their tits. She also sells hand-drawn coloring books called Hey Net Girl Hey and The Official Digital Valley Girl Coloring Book. Her heavily reblogged magic marker caricatures of famous girls include Frida Kahlo and Gwen Stefani. At first I didn't really get Grace. One of her paintings simply reads GUCCI MANE TWITTER THAT and her Tumblr looks like a Facebook profile, but then she told me that her work "investigates and celebrates female adolescence in terms of technology and pop culture", so I guess I started to think about that stuff. Grace says she first started calling herself a feminist when she went to a Le Tigre concert when she was 16 and later studied at an all-female liberal arts college in Massachusetts and became involved with female organizations. Which probably means there's a lot more thought gone into the slow-motion videos of Grace swishing her hair around than is immediately obvious.
The Ardorous describe themselves as a feminist art collective. It's a sort of internet photography gallery and features projects and the work of a ton of girls inlcuding Arvida Bystrom, Moni Hayworth, Grace Miceli, Masha Mel, and Petra Collins. It's all B-52's style sunglasses, Virgin Suicides references, grade-school accessories, brightly-colored stubby nails, curly-haired chicks, gay chicks, pretty girls, skinny girls, girls with bellies, underwear, temporary tattoos, colored hair, frilly socks with sandals, expired film, 'tasteful' tits, and teddy bears.
Arvida is a super-cute artist and blogger who first caught my attention about a year ago with a poem she posted on her now-defunct blog that went something like—three things in bed that aren't you: 1. My fingers, 2. My teddy bear, 3. My dildo. She's also big on pictures of hairy vaginas—that's her muth in The Ardourous picture above—and scrawled on semi-nude self-portraits. She wouldn't call her work feminist, but seems to be all over the internet-based collectives and collaborative zines that loosely fit into this whole thing.
Beth Siveyer's Girls Get Busy is a site and xeroxed cut-and-paste zine, filled with scraggly illustrations on pink paper with poems submitted by readers and scrawled out slogans like 'I like fucking'. I visited Beth at work in a London sex shop, where she explained how she's determined to change the stigma attached to old-fashioned feminism. Beth embraces her girly nature. One cover of GGB features a charming pencil drawing of a headless woman's body showing her vagina surrounded by bunny, butterfly, and heart stickers. In the spirit of the original Riot Grrrl zines, Girls Get Busy features girls' rants as well:
Why I Am A High School Feminist: A manifesta by Quinn G.
BECAUSE they still throw ugly words at the sluts and the outcasts in the cafeteria
BECAUSE my psych textbook tells me "if you have a vagina, your gender identity is female, and if you have a penis, your gender identity is male"
BECAUSE no one told me a goddamn thing about the women I look up to so much and admire and want to be like. Never, not at all, period
BECAUSE I didn't punch that motherfucker in the face for thinking he had a right to openly, "humorously" speculate over my perceived gender
Beth told me she was 13 when she first heard Bikini Kill on a mixtape a pen-pal had made me about ten years previously. Beth said, "It totally stirred something in me and I liked that, before then I'd kind of felt alienated." Other contributors include Molly Soda, Grace Miceli, and the girls from Throwing Up. There's also a monthly launch party, the zine sells hundreds of copies, and the GGB Tumblr is pretty popular too.
Sophie has a blog called Love Buzz where she posts pictures of herself and lots of the "sickeningly girly" female icons she's inspired by, including Barbie, Queen Angelyn, and Baby Spice. Her super-girly style seems to appeal to a lot of the self-proclaimed teen feminests on the internet, but when asked her opinions on the subject of feminism she sent me a bunch of confused paragraphs and then apologized for being hungover. Sophie also makes hugely the popular zine, Cam Girls, which consists of webcam and cameraphone pictures of girls showing off their personal style, think 10 Things I Hate About You, but cuter. Each zine also includes a beaded necklace that spells out words like SEX or BRAT.
VOMIT PINK
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If you are still not convinced that this exists beyond an intangible internet fad, Garage, the politically dubious art-fashion zine that counts Richard Prince, Damian Hirst, Hedi Slimane, and the Chapman brothers amongst its contributors, features a pull-out zine titled Vomit Pink, which is co-curated by Tavi Gevinson. The zine is packaged like a teenage girl's notebook, with pages decorated with sparkly stickers and pencil-drawn hearts and stars. A photo by Petra Collins, curator of The Arduous, shows what appears to be the body of a blonde girl laying in a bath of red water, wearing only a tiara, a cheerleading vest, and white knickers. Vomit Pink also features work by Molly Soda and the girls listed above. Maybe these girls aren't really that clued-up about feminism but they sure are making it look pretty.
ANNA RYON




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Peppa Pig
November 15, 2011 12:00pm
These girls are too cute to be feminists. That's why they don't REALLY hate men. Only a truly ugly woman hates men.
@pig
November 15, 2011 12:32pm
you fucking idiot, feminism is the OPPOSITE of caring about how cute you are. It's to nothing to do with looks. These girls just care about EQUALITY
Zoe
November 15, 2011 12:51pm
Girls, just liking retarded girly childhood shit doesn't make you a feminist. Read some books ffs.
@Zoe
November 15, 2011 02:00pm
liking retarded girly childhood stuff is not a quality mutually exclusive from reading books. making undue assumptions is just stupid or didn't you read that in a book somewhere?
maisie
November 15, 2011 02:01pm
big up ma girl sophie convz
alpha male
November 15, 2011 02:22pm
I could straighten these girls out and get them to shave
a fat clam
November 15, 2011 02:29pm
I'd get busy with Sophie Convey
Bertrand
November 15, 2011 06:03pm
http://www.vice.com/en_uk/read/photographic-moratorium-unshaven-armpits
petra
November 15, 2011 06:51pm
awesome! one little thing though it's spelled Ardorous
anz
November 15, 2011 08:15pm
go onnn sophie <3 <3
@Bertrand
November 16, 2011 11:05am
VICE style are being consistent http://vicestyle.com/en/features/shoot/gallery/isnt-she-lovely-arvida-bystrom http://vicestyle.com/en/features/shoot/gallery/retro-bush fashion people tend to be better at love than hate
Tubesteak
November 16, 2011 06:52pm
...girls with hairy pits are so gross...when they realise it repels the sausage they seriously break out the razor!...even lezbos shave...hell, even men nowadays are more trimmed than that girl!!!.... ...and Petra, check a proper dictionary, not an English hating American one put out by Webster...Webster was a bigot....
Monika
November 17, 2011 05:38pm
The first collage is by Monika Mogi http://www.theardorous.com/portfolio/nascent/ Please give credit.
~<~@
November 17, 2011 06:44pm
What a bunch of uniformed and idiotic people you have on here, Vice. Lemme just spend a bit of my time debunking some of these myths and generalities. "These women are too cute to be feminists. That's why they don't REALLY hate men. Only a truly ugly woman hates men." - I'm not even going to bother answerin' this, obvious troll is obvious. "I could straighten these girls out and get them to shave" Alpha Male, go rot in a hole. There is nothing "Alpha" about telling anyone what to do with their bodies. Just because you don't find it sexually attractive/can understand why someone wants to grow their hair doesn't mean that you have a right to try and change them. And Tubesteak...you are the most idiotic of all these comments, so let me continue and concentrate on you. "when they realise it repels the sausage they seriously break out the razor!" - Yes, because everything that women do when they reach pubety and beyond is to please you. When I wake up in the morning, I look at my clothes and think "what would make Tubesteak happy? I mean, I could wear the little tube-top but it may show off some of my stomach, best not today." GO FUCK YOURSELF. "even lezbos shave" - nice one on generalizing a whole sexuality. I mean, I have a boyfriend and I don't shave my underarms, I trim my vagina and shave my legs. BECAUSE IT'S MY FUCKING BODY. So what's that, you use 3 Hammer to brush your teeth, and I use Colgate...well, the study says that I DON'T GIVE A FUCK! DO WHAT YOU WANT WITH YOUR BODY AND I'LL DO WHAT I WANT WITH MINE.
whut_ever
November 18, 2011 01:01pm
thanks for mentioning my work and not giving credit, nice. > http://jessicamaiwalker.blogspot.com/
@whut_ever
November 18, 2011 03:13pm
Whutever, what work, mind clarifying?
sally
November 26, 2011 10:16am
just because these girls are interested in fashion and art does not mean that you can undermine their feminism. i am sure they are all well researched and interested in feminism, otherwise they wouldn't be adopting a movement with such stigma around it, since being a feminist definitely isn't considered "cool" by a lot of people. they truly believe in it and that's why they do what they do. a lot of them combine aesthetics from feminists like courtney love circa 1995 and riot grrrl in their presentations. why can't you just accept the fact that women can be well informed about feminism, into it and make great art and look good well doing it? don't be so patronizing.
John Doe
December 05, 2011 06:21pm
Sorry Sally. I am going home to listen to kd lang and eat lentils. Bye forever, J x
yumcha
January 24, 2012 12:34pm
All of these new-fangled internet feminist types are white and middle class