Lady Madonna…We should ALL look this good at 52.
L'invecchiamento, Photoshopped e bellissima Madonna.
These shots are taken from the Dolce & Gabbana photo shoot Madge did back in April -not the sunnies one (though looking at those pictures, it isn't hard to tell where Gaga gets her style inspiration) -but for the chi-chi Italian label's 2010 Fall/Winter collection. This may or may not have been around the time she had a little something done to her face. Really? I don't care. It's not like she looks radically different (c'mon, she does not) nor is she trying to force some homogenized, Montagesque, Countess-Blandula-look onto her features. The Italiante features are still intact: the dark, large Latin eyes, the angular brow and chin, the full mouth. Here is a fine, fit 52-year-old fab-o woman keeping her sh*t together, and, if I may say so, doing it very, very well.
Also? Nice rack.
People are sniping over the Photoshopping. But I don't see anyone -apart from Diva Julia, actually -calling out Gaga for that Rolling Stone cover. This might come as a shock, but, it must be stated: the entire music/movie/fashion/celeb world relies on Photoshop. Men, women, kids, even pets. Who created this? Us? Them? We're back to the chicken/egg argument. Maybe being less harsh on older women is a start in broadening our perspectives and expectations; if we demand "au natural" from Madonna, we ought to demand it from all of D&G's campaigns, and, more broadly, from every single fashion designer, retailer, band, entertainer, performer ... everyone. And no one -repeat, no one -will be ugly, but simply unique and individual. No? Fantasy, you say? It only takes one person to change their perception. I adore the non-Photoshopped photos myself; she's just beautiful, though I'd love to hand her a facecloth to see the skin and not the makeup. That, alas, feels like a tall order.
When it comes to actual plastic surgery, we expect our performers to look a specific way, and certainly Madonna is well-aware of the scales being tipped toward youth in the Western beauty stakes -especially when it comes to women. Some ladies choose the odd nip and tuck to complement their aging features -they're not "holding on to their youth(s)", forpitysake, they're doing maintenance. Just as there's nothing wrong with getting old, there's nothing wrong with a few fixings here and there, either. Minor keys, not major lifts (to borrow from Leonard Cohen) are what makes for aging gracefully. Madonna is a perfect example of this.
Kudos, bella. I hope you get many boys to carry your groceries. When you're done, send them my way. I have that very same damn dress for a start --and the rack. I'm working on the wrinkle correction. Honest.
Photos (via Celebitchy)
Written by: Diva Julia








June 23rd, 2010 - 18:24
Cate; BRAVO! it’s not like her jaw snaps open every time she crosses her legs, plus she has always said she is not against freshening up, and pointed out Catherine Denuve.
( spelled wrong I know) if your gonna lambast a girl for wanted to look her best, go after the entire make up companies, hair companies, ect, I love how magazines push unattainable looks (if fat was hard to do what are the chances THAT would be everyone’s goal) because you can’t sell what you can achieve, and we allow ourselves to take that crap in, agree with THEM that we are not good enough, and keep them in money. Madonna you make my heart smile, and I think your spirit is what makes you beautiful. nip/ tuck/ botox whatever you want, people should look deeper into themselves and analyze where their opinion actually originated from, and why they allow it to have free rent in their vacuous brains.