IBC
If you’re already tickled pink to see Barbie on the big screen you will be familiar with the dayglo gloss with which the film appears plastered.
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So much so that the
entire supply of the fluorescent pink paint available at the time was diverted
to create Barbieland at Warner Bros Leavesden, which in turn caused a shortage
of stock at supplier Rosco.
“The world ran out
of pink,” the film’s Production Designer, Sarah Greenwood, told the
Architectural Digest.
In the same
interview, the film’s Director Greta Gerwig said the colour was important in
“maintaining the ‘kid-ness’” of the film’s aesthetic.
“I wanted the pinks
to be very bright, and everything to be almost too much,” Gerwig said, adding
that she didn’t want to “forget what made me love Barbie when I was a little
girl.”
Barbie is both live action feature and marquee sales generator for brand
owner Mattel. A new white paper exploring the psychological impact of
colour in narrative storytelling and brand advertising has just been published
by New York finishing house Nice Shoes.
Its colourists
argue that it is not only creativity that relies on colour: all forms of
communication do. The link between colour and human psychology is so
established that any communications strategy must utilise its power.
Orlando Wood, Chief
Innovation Officer at marketing agency System1 Group helped put the paper
together. He said: “If you want to create an environment in which people are
happy to exist and spend time, it needs to be an attractive and
beautiful one.
“All the available evidence tells us that warmer colours are
more successful at doing this than cooler ones. They make us more comfortable,
they elicit positive emotional reactions, and we tend to want to continue
watching something warmer for longer.”
Clearly the primary-coloured Barbie is intent on
bringing us feelgood vibes – even if
Ken is having an existential crisis.
There’s something
more to the colour in Barbie than just its neon-candy appeal. Colour in visual
communications is a code, overt or subtle, and pink itself has an interesting
history.
“Millennial pink
was one of those important colours that captured the zeitgeist,” Jenny Clark,
Head of Color at WGSN, said last year. “It pushed the boundaries to become
a colour which was gender neutral and it felt empowering, youthful, playful,
and, most importantly, wearable.”
Nice Shoes noted
that during the 2016 US presidential election, millennial pink represented
resistance with hundreds of thousands of people marching and protesting while
wearing pink hats, in contrast to the red MAGA caps of the incumbent president.
The shade swiftly became omnipresent across industries and products (interiors,
fashion, tech) and soon reached a point of cultural oversaturation.
Its demise was
marked this year when the London restaurant, Sketch, redecorated its iconic
pink Instagram-destination of a dining room (launched in 2014, the same year as
Wes Anderson’s rose-hued The Grand Budapest Hotel hit the
cinemas), in shades of earthy yellow.
Pink is the shade
most closely associated with femininity and girlhood today. Director Sofia
Coppola, most known for her layered depictions of womanhood, used shades of
pink in The Virgin Suicides and in Marie Antoinette to
interrogate the hyper-feminine nature of her protagonists, bathing them in rosy
hues.
Pink’s association
with all things feminine, however, is a fairly recent one. As Nice Shoes
outlines, the diktat of pink for girls and blue for boys - familiar to anyone
who has witnessed ‘gender reveal’ videos - was quite the reverse only a hundred
years ago. In 1927, pink was thought to be the appropriate colour for boys due
to its association with strength (and the complementary associations to its
parent colour, red) while blue was thought to be daintier, prettier, more
suited to little girls.
The historian Jo B.
Paoletti thought that the invention of prenatal testing solidified this trend
from the 1980s onwards. When parents learnt the sex of their baby, they could
‘emphasise’ it with the colours of the products they purchased before the
baby’s birth.
Mattel bought into
this with its early ranges of Barbie merchandise though it has swerved from
straightforward gender and colour stereotypes in recent times (and in doing so
been accused of ‘rainbow capitalism’).
The 2008 animated
feature, Barbie & The Diamond Castle is often said to be the gayest
Barbie movie yet. Liana, the Barbie, and her BFF Alexa, “are dragged off a
rainbow, away from their cis-het partners”.
According to Nice
Shoes, the meaning of colour needs to be placed in context and that demonstrates
that there’s nothing essentially ‘feminine’ or ‘masculine’ about either blue or
pink: “In another hundred years the trend may be reversed again or done away
with altogether.”
Take for instance
the arrival of Janelle Monáe’s Make Me Feel video. The 2018 video used
neon shades of pink, blue and purple at once (the colours of the bisexual
flag), which was dubbed ‘bisexual lighting’ by the media.
The openly queer
Monáe spends the video flirting with her girlfriend, played by Tessa Thompson,
and playfully running back and forth between her and a man.
“While the use of
those colours isn’t itself new, the newfound queer - specifically bisexual -
meaning gave audiences a new way of reading moving images,” Nice Shoes
suggested.
Films
including Moonlight, Atomic Blonde, and the ‘San Junipero’ episode
of Black Mirror bathed their protagonists in the ethereal mix
of blue, pink, and purple light, “conveying metatextual elements of those
characters’ biographies through colour alone,” Nice Shoes’ Colourists suggested
“Employing the mix
of blue, purple, and pink works as a signal to the audience that the characters
on screen are bi, without having to spell it out narratively at every point.”
On the surface,
Gerwig’s film appears to play to the high camp of Ken living in a Barbie world.
In devising Barbie’s fantasy house the director referenced Pee-wee’s Big
Adventure to Wayne Thiebaud’s paintings of pies to Gene Kelly’s tiny
painter’s garret in An American in Paris.
“Why walk down
stairs when you can slide into your pool? Why trudge upstairs when you take an
elevator that matches your dress?”
For Barbie’s
bedroom, the team paired a clamshell headboard upholstered in velvet with a
sequined coverlet. Her closet, meanwhile, reveals coordinated outfits in
toy-box vitrines. “It’s very definitely a house for a single woman,” said
Greenwood, noting that when the first Dreamhouse (a cardboard
foldout) was sold in 1962 it was rare for a woman to own her own home.
Set decorator Katie
Spencer summed up: “She is the ultimate feminist icon.”
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