This month I visited an art gallery featuring Rally Carwood's body image project. The purpose of this exhibition is to help people understand the people inside us who make us beautiful. When I entered the gallery, the first thing I saw was a large cardboard containing the magazines and pictures of people I visited. Generally, everyone in the comment said that the beauty we saw in a magazine is not true. The message from the magazine people is that you are not beautiful unless you look like them.
These facts came from the JTF Body Image Project written by Jean Holzgang, an advertising campaign on body images. In fashion magazines, many young girls see "slim" models like Kate Moss, one of many top models. Sadly, it represents a "perfect" body image that a young girl is seeking. Unfortunately, many girls do not understand that having their own model looks unrealistic. As a matter of fact, many of the pictures of the supermodels are decorated before printing, and in "fashion clothing" duct tape is used to enhance the fit. It is 23-25% lower than normal women. All of this is to create an "ideal" or "perfect" body image.
Introduction The body image is a self-evaluation of the appearance and shape of the body. When there is a difference between the ideal body image of a person and the perception of one's body, there is interference with the image of the body. Body image dissatisfaction (BID) is a negative subjective assessment of the human body. In the adolescence, the body image changes rapidly, and young people are extremely worried about it. Young people who are dissatisfied with their physical image may be trapped in a variety of health hazard behaviors that lead to inappropriate energy intake and ingestion of essential nutrients, thereby compromising growth, development and health . BID is an important predictor of the incidence of eating disorders (Neumark-Sztainer, Paxton, Hannan, Haines, & Story, 2006) and is a range of psychiatric disorders such as depression and low self-esteem.