LaurenGreenfield:Bio

http://www.laurengreenfield.com/index.php?p=CPWSTGDI / Girl Culture
http://www.laurengreenfield.com/index.php?p=9R2AJPO2 / Slide Show

http://www.laurengreenfield.com/index.php?p=VPGHSTCS / Fast Forward
http://www.laurengreenfield.com/index.php?p=XX8NXVSA / Slide Show

http://www.laurengreenfield.com/index.php?p=8W0GTPNS / Kids and Consumerism
http://www.laurengreenfield.com/index.php?p=7W0TZ05W/ Slide Show

http://stories.instituteartistmanagement.com/laurengreenfield-childbeautyqueens.html / Child Beauty Queens

Acclaimed photographer Lauren Greenfield is considered a preeminent chronicler of youth culture and gender as a result of her groundbreaking projects Girl Culture, Fast Forward, and THIN.

IN
LGAcclaimed photographer Lauren Greenfield is considered a preeminent chronicler of youth culture and gender as a result of her groundbreaking projects Girl Culture, Fast Forward, and THIN. Her photographs have been widely published and exhibited and are in many museum collections including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Getty Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the International Center of Photography. She was named by American Photo as one of the 25 most influential photographers working today. Greenfield was one of eight photographers in the inaugural exhibit of The Annenberg Space for Photography in Los Angeles (2009). Greenfield’s work is also featured in a major historical exhibition at the Getty Museum entitled “Engaged Observers: Documentary Photography since the Sixties” (2010). The THIN and Girl Culture traveling exhibitions, curated by Trudy Wilner Stack, have been seen by half a million people in over thirty venues around the world. Greenfield’s first feature-length documentary film, THIN, aired on HBO, and is accompanied by a photography book of the same name (Chronicle Books, 2006). In this unflinching and incisive study, Greenfield embarks on an emotional journey through the Renfrew Center in Coconut Creek, Florida, a residential facility dedicated to the treatment of eating disorders. The feature-length documentary premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2006 and was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Direction in 2007. It won the Grierson Award for best documentary at the London Film Festival, and Grand Jury Prizes at the Independent Film Festival of Boston, the Newport International Film Festival, and the Jackson Hole Film Festival. The project was featured on The Today Show, Good Morning America, Nightline, and CNN and was excerpted in People Magazine. Greenfield’s subsequent documentary, a short entitled kids + money, was selected for the Sundance Film Festival 2008, won the Audience Award at the AFI Film Festival, the Hugo Gold Plaque at the Chicago International Television Awards, the Michael Moore Award for Best Documentary, the Cinema Eye Honor for Nonfiction Filmmaking, and broadcast on HBO in 2008. The film is a conversation with young people from diverse Los Angeles communities about the role of money in their lives. Greenfield graduated from Harvard in 1987 and started her career as an intern for National Geographic. Since then, her photographs have been regularly published in the New York Times Magazine, Time, GQ, and American Photo, and have won many awards including the International Center for Photography Infinity Award, the Hasselblad Grant, the Community Awareness Award from the National Press Photographers, and the Moscow Biennial People’s Choice Award. She lectures on her photography, youth culture, and body image at museums and universities around the country.



LaurenGreenfield:Features
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LaurenGreenfield:Films
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CHILD BEAUTY QUEENS // Lauren Greenfield

Summary: A flurry of feathers, faux eyelashes, fake hair and “flippers” (fake teeth worn to perfect that pageant smile) surround the toddler pageant hopefuls and their frenzied moms backstage at the California Gold Coast Beauty Pageant in Oxnard, California. Hours before the pageant, little girls are preened and primped backstage. The toddlers get full spray tans and eyebrow waxes. Parents hire professional hair and makeup artists to paint their children’s faces and tease their hair into perfect curls. Lastly, the girls are nestled into glitzy outfits (often with $2,000 plus price tag) and placed in childrens’ high heels. They are groomed to become little dolls for their minute onstage, a moment that validates all the tears and tantrums when parents glimpse their children smile and transform.

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It is estimated that 250,000 children compete in more than 5,000 pageants across the United States each year. The world of child pageants has reemerged on the pop culture scene with the popularity—and shock— of the TLC reality series, “Toddlers and Tiaras.” The show, now in its fourth and final season, documents contestants and their families as they prepare for pageant shows across the country. “Toddlers and Tiaras” recently made headlines when the series showed a 3-year old dressed as Julia Robert’s hooker character in “Pretty Woman”, complete with crop top and leather thigh high boots. Her mother, Wendy Dickey, shocked at the outrage and media frenzy, explains, “Well, at this pageant there was an option to do celebrity wear. Julia Roberts is my favorite actress of all time. I thought it was real cute to do Julia. She’s 3, if she was 10 I never would have considered this. But as young as she is, I thought it was very comical.” Other episodes have featured a mom adorning her daughter with fake breasts and padding on the butt to portray Dolly Parton, and another dressing her daughter in a gold conical bustier as Madonna in the 80s.IAM_00024957 IAM_00025021Critics are outraged at the overt sexualization of young girls in pageant culture and warn that its extreme focus on physical appearance will negatively affect their self-confidence. The child beauty queens will grow up with the understanding that they are not good enough, and that their worth is in the glitz and glamour of the pageants. Conversely, many pageant moms claim that winning a pageant is the biggest confidence booster for their children. “My daughter is so much more confident and outgoing than other kids her age,” Dickey said. “She has a huge personality. That will be important later on.”At the California Gold Coast Beauty Pageant, Kailia Deliz, 5, wins every category in her age group. Her awards include Front Cover, Most Photogenic, Character Centerfold, Swimsuit, Universal, Best Smile (with the help of her “flippers” or fake teeth) and the High Point Scorer for the entire pageant, a $500 prize. Deliz is coached by Miss Utah contestant, Cambrie Littlefield.IAM_00024943 IAM_00025007For these families, pageants are an all-consuming lifestyle that requires dedication of both time and finances. Eden Wood, a child pageant star featured on the show, has traveled the national pageant circuit since her first birthday, before “retiring” at age six to pursue singing and modeling. Her mother, Mickie Wood, estimates spending close to $100,000 dollars on costumes during Eden’s pageant career.IAM_00024953 IAM_00024960

 
Links

Child Beauty Pageant photos in the archive
Eden Wood photos in the archive
Lauren Greenfield's Bio
Lauren Greenfield's Features
Lauren Greenfield in the News
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