Car Girls by Jacqueline Hassink |
| Blogs |
| Written by Guy Lane |
| 07 Feb 2009 |
|
For someone who does not drive, Jacqueline Hassink has spent an inordinate amount of time in recent years looking at cars. Since 2001 she has visited, and re-visited, the international motor shows of Shanghai, Frankfurt, Paris, New York and Geneva - to name just a few. Not that the cars were ever her subject…
Maserati girl, Tokyo from Car Girls © Jacqueline Hassink
‘I’d never been to a car show until a journalist who works for Fortune Magazine said if you really want to understand something about corporate Japan you have to visit one. So I went to the Tokyo Motor Show - it was an incredible, inspiring and fascinating environment for me, and after spending several hours there I came up with lots of ideas, and started thinking ‘I have to do something with this’. That’s how it started. I was really fascinated with how the car industry used the female image as a way of corporate identity through the car girls.’
Maserati girl, Frankfurt from Car Girls © Jacqueline Hassink
‘I think it’s really interesting that - in that case - a local industry like Toyota or Nissan - tries to create a seductive fantasy image of a woman that is highly attractive to the male audience; and they do it in a very smart way. They have to appeal to thousands and thousands of visitors because the Tokyo Show goes on for days, and attracts a huge audience. So you get a real sense of an aesthetic based around seduction and female beauty. And there is also an attempt to create a kind of manga women - an ideal derived from the drawings and magazines that are so popular there.’
Fiat girl, Shanghai from Car Girls © Jacqueline Hassink
‘I found out that there were different functions, or three different levels, that these car girls have: there are the so-called sexy girls who are not allowed to talk - they are just there to seduce and stand beside the car; and then you have the microphone girls who stand on the platform talking about the new technology - everybody listens to what they say; then there are the women on the ground - the sales girls in business attire wearing simple trouser suits.’
Ferrari girl, Shanghai from Car Girls © Jacqueline Hassink
‘I am totally respectful towards their profession. It’s a job - they’re doing their job. They’re getting paid for it, and they’re free to take the job, or not to do it. There’s nothing wrong with it. I’m trying to map and to understand the global players of the car industry, which when I created the work was one of the largest industries in the world. I’m creating bodies of work in which I investigate certain topics that are highly fascinating to me, without really judging.’
‘There are two editions of the book - a small travel edition and a larger luxury one. We wanted to get that feeling of extravagance and seduction, so Irma came up with this idea of using a metallic kind of ink - some of the pages are silver, for example; and there are further coloured pages that are related to the cars or the dresses. And we have twelve different foldouts which really map the project on a lot of different levels. For instance one of them is called car brands - you can open the three pages to see the brands in alphabetical order, against a list of all the cities that I’ve visited, so you get a whole overview of how Ferrari girls look in Shanghai, how they look in Detroit, and so on.'
'It’s very colourful and very dynamic. I think its one of the happiest books I’ve made.’
Publ. Aperture, March 2009 $85 |