Beauty is a religion in South Korea, a place where ‘good’ skin can accelerate your career and off - the -shelf nose jobs are part of growing up. Ingeborg van Lotringen jets in
‘Vere is ze makeup art is te? Ze gir l looks greasy.’ I’m caught in a culturally sensitive stand-off between a French photographer and his model, the South Korean movie star and face of Flower By Kenzo perfume, Tae-Ri Kim. She’s radiant in the Seoul evening light streaming through the windows of our penthouse suite. In fact, she looks almost, er, moist. Or, in Korean parlance, ‘chok chok’. And that’s exactly how she, and her bemused makeup artist, like it. Because the perfect face, according to Koreans, is translucently clear, free of any dark spots, blotches or even pores, and hyper-hydrated. They like to refer to it as ‘glass skin’ and, by Confucius, they all have it.
I’ll be honest: I have been eye-rolling at the Korean beauty invasion for years, unconvinced as to why the phalanx of technicolour, bear-shaped, fruit-scented cosmetics should do anything for my skin that my favourite professional brands, or even trusty high-street products, couldn’t. Packaged as they are, these potions were bound to become an Internet sensation – but that hardly guarantees sensational skincare, as far as I’m concerned. In fact, in the West, the more clinical and unappealing something looks, the more faith we tend to have in it: you’re paying for the effort put into the contents, not the bottle.
But looking at Kim and, later, at the locals ambling through freezing, smoggy Seoul, I begin to realise I may have been wrong to scoff at the melting creams, pressed serums and face blurs as so much hype over substance. These people have good skin. I mean, really good skin. Luminous, blemish-free and plump – all of them. It can’t be makeup – they hardly seem to wear any.
Esta historia es de la edición August 2019 de Cosmopolitan - South Africa.
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Esta historia es de la edición August 2019 de Cosmopolitan - South Africa.
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