Embed from Getty Images
A couple of days ago a French wax museum, Musee Grevin, came under fire for a wax figure of Dwayne The Rock Johnson. It had a conspicuously light skin tone that didn’t look anything like him (and weird eyes! I am glad I am not the only person who noticed that). People on social media compared the figure to Mr Clean. Dwayne commented on the whole thing on Instagram and I thought he was pretty good-natured about it. He said he was going to reach out to the museum–imagine being the person to take that phone call. He was “rather friendly” on the phone according to the museum’s head of PR. They updated the wax figure’s skin tone within 24 hours using a kind of oil paint, and it does look more like him. But they’re still insisting it was just an honest mistake. I think it was unconscious bias.
France’s Musée Grévin took Dwayne Johnson’s comments and social media outcry over the star’s botched wax figure to heart. Within 24 hours, his figure was updated by artists who gave it a slightly darker skin tone with meticulous strokes of oil painting. Johnson’s suburban dad-esque outfit, however, has remained.
“We found his reaction rather friendly when addressing the fact that his figure was indeed whiter than it should have been,” said Veronique Berecz, the museum’s head of PR who has been at the iconic museum for over four decades and worked closely with the likes of Michael Jackson, Nicolas Cage and Donald Sutherland on their wax figures.
“Unfortunately, we didn’t get to meet Dwayne Johnson so we used several photos — but as it turns out, pictures can be very tricky because the nuances of skin tones can differ depending on the lighting on photos,” she said. “Every time, the sculptor has to determine the exact face and body shapes, the volumes and it’s always a very complicated challenge if we haven’t met the person.”
They are still blaming this on inaccurate lighting in photos: Asked about her thoughts on accusations of the museum “whitewashing” Johnson’s figure, she said it didn’t cross anyone’s minds. “This has nothing do with it — we just made an honest mistake based on the photos we looked at,” she said. “After we saw all these reactions on different blogs and social networks, we changed it immediately.”
[From Yahoo]
Here’s the kicker with this whole “bad lighting in photos” excuse. In almost every news story about the wax figure, they display a picture of the real Dwayne Johnson with a picture of the wax figure next to it, so people can see the difference in skin tone (that’s also how we ran the original story). My point is that there are plenty of photos out there that show his skin color accurately, because news sites are using them. So it’s just disingenuous to me that the lighting in reference photos is to blame. Dwayne The Rock Johnson is hugely famous. There must be millions of pictures of him out there, and dozens of hours of footage. There were resources out there to create a figure that was more accurate. Unconscious bias is a real thing.
Embed from Getty Images
Original wax figure:
Images credit: Avalon.red, Getty and via Instagram
Source: Read Full Article
-
Jung Kook, Usher Share Video For 'Standing Next To You' Remix
-
Ruth Langsford felt ‘dagger in the heart’ as she opens up on sad family struggle
-
Emma Forbes looks incredible in a black swimsuit in Barbados
-
Loose Women star forced to miss Christmas party after medical emergency
-
Beyoncé and Jay-Z Rent Out and Ride Tour Bus Through NYC With Family