top of page

The leopard skin trajectory

When they got to Madrid the centre was already occupied. They started

settling to the south of the city: in Parla, Fuenlabrada, Leganés or Getafe.

They came from Andalusia and Extremadura. They changed the village

for the neighbourhood. They came to work and they became the working

class. This was nearly fifty years ago.

Today their grandchildren live in these dormitory cities in the south,

where a sense of village and neighbourhood life coexist. They have

inherited a number of things from the early settlers: they are still working

class and still have a strong fighting spirit or pride, as this is where the

village outlook meets leopard skin.

What’s the difference two generations on between the way a girl from

Parla looks today and another from central Madrid? The canons of

beauty in the capital are defined from the top of the media pyramid: you

only have to look at advertising and fashion magazines to discover why

people wear what they do each season. Neighbourhood aesthetics, in

contrast, cannot be found in glossy magazines, practitioners drink at the

source, drawn their inspiration from what their immediate environment.

This is the essential difference: in an era of mass culture, ideals of

neighbourhood beauty are still passed down from mothers to daughters.

You won’t find these styles advertised, they are made up of products sold

at local markets that don’t feature on the pages of fashion magazines.

And, unlike the fashion industry, they do not seek to create a culture in

order to sell it as they feed into a culture.

Neighbourhood aesthetics comprise memes or signs of identity that are

copied automatically from generation to generation. Hence we can trace

with ease the genealogy of the leopard skin look. Leopard skin is a time-

honoured reference from the nobility. It probably reached these shores

courtesy of the British colonists who borrowed it from the ancient

African kings and as years passed it was gradually adopted as a status

symbol by Andulusian housewives; wearing an ostentatious profusion of

ringed bracelets, gold rings and earrings, all proof of a gypsy heritage. Or

wearing the omnipresent Catholic Virgin Medal or the Caravaca cross

that her great-grandmother wore during the Civil War. Or with dyed

blonde hair reminiscent of Swedish tourists from the 60s, or with

fabulous, heavy makeup.

Neighbourhood aesthetics are about ostentation and pride. It’s no good

being shy and retiring in the neighbourhood, you have to show off what

you’ve got. Girls use the same strategies their mothers did to make

themselves look good and their Playboy tattoos are a reflection of the

daring bust lines they were nurtured on. Attitude; neighbourhood

women are forces to be reckoned with. Despite the highly coherent

updating process consisting of piercings and aesthetic innovations from

Japan, the look they adopt remains a respectful evolution of the culture

of their forebears. So unlike a twenty-year old goth, hip-hop fan or post-

punk follower, a pokera from the neighbourhood never looks out of place

in the family photo and her mother is unlikely to tell her off about the

way she looks. Modernity and respect Messenger, leopard skin and

Camarón.

Belleza de Barrio - Ricardo Cases

€75.00Price
Quantity

    R E L A T E D    P H O T O B O O K S    

    bottom of page