Shop-window aggressive mannequin, Copenhagen, 1986


Copenhagen, Denmark, Annabell Boutique, August 1986.
From Plastic Girls: 50 Years of Artificial Beauty.

Aggression becomes fully articulated.
Makeup, gesture, and facial tension no longer simulate life but enforce confrontation, confirming a local display language where artificial bodies are designed to provoke, not attract, and excess replaces illusion as the dominant strategy.

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© Ikonographia / Roberto Bigano

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SKU: 7020-1986-08-003 Categories: , ,
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READ MORE — PLASTIC GIRLS: 50 YEARS OF ARTIFICIAL BEAUTY

Plastic Girls: 50 Years of Artificial Beauty (1977–2025)

Plastic Girls is a long-term photographic study of window mannequins as cultural artifacts of their time. Created over nearly fifty years, the project examines how artificial female bodies were designed and displayed in public space, reflecting changing ideals of beauty, femininity, desire, and social aspiration. Read as a continuous sequence rather than isolated images, the series reveals how consumer culture repeatedly shaped—and reshaped—the representation of the female form.

All photographs were taken from the street, through shop-window glass, without special access or permissions. Nothing is staged or arranged for the camera: the images record what is openly visible yet rarely observed with sustained attention.

Over time, this accumulation exposes patterns no single moment could reveal—recurring gestures, evolving materials, racial and anatomical codifications, and a gradual movement from abstraction to hyper-realism. The project seeks neither irony nor nostalgia, but sustained looking.

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