Four Vogue Greece Covers Celebrate 14 Body-Loving Women by Thanassis Krikis
/The March 2022 issue of Vogue Greece joins a global Vogue project that unites all editions of Vogue, asking the essential question: In the age of the perfect image, how easy is it to truly love our "unfiltered" body?
Photographer Thanassis Krikis [IG] photographs 14 women “with real bodies” [we hope so!] and shares them with no retouching. Nicholas Georgiou provides creative direction and George Karapetis acts as stylist on the fashion story, with input from editor-in-chief Thaleia Karafyllidou.
The 14 women have different proportions, age, skin color, and different life stories. Each woman has experienced a battle with her body and after finally learning to love themselves came out stronger. I believe the research also says the become healthier in the aggregate when the stopped waiting for the acceptance of others.
Because AOC has moved on from this topic — having discussed it and lived it for 15 years on AOC — we hope that Vogue will soon tackle the next “elephant in the room”. The beloved animal, unfortunately assigned to America’s Republican party, is the role of religion and patriarchy in this discussion about women’s bodies.
We do not separate a discussion about body acceptance from a concurrent discussion of sexuality and the right of men to control women’s bodies in every aspect. It’s our position that a woman must make peace with her religion and/or spiritual beliefs [if they exist] as well as sexism to truly free herself from body-loathing.
Kanye West is deeply disturbed over his inability to now control Kim Kardashian’s sexuality and her body, because he absolutely believes it is his right as a man and as KK’s husband. Ye says that God spoke to him in the shower and told him to shut own Planned Parenthood, but West extends his rights of control even beyond abortion and contraception.
We have multiple Trump candidates running for Congressional office who want to eliminate birth control in America. And Kanye West is in court trying to stop Kim Kardashian from being declared legally single. This issues are all deeply connected — which probably explains why we’ve made so little progress in helping women learn to love our bodies.
It’s not as if Vogue has never waded into these waters. No top model understands the drive of right-wing politicians and their voters to end not only abortion rights but hard-fought rights in the LGBTIQA+ community better than Anja Rubik.
The supermodel bared her body and issued a blistering attack against the Polish government in the December 2020 issues of most global Vogues.