The paintover is just to show how I’d alter the proportions and shapes, not the surface treatment. It’s a quick paintover, so I can’t really devote too much time to doing all the skin textures–especially that I’m teaching a workshop right now of record-breaking number of students (the highest number since the debut of the workshop), so I’m completely swamped.
So if you just imagine my paintover with the kind of skin textures you prefer, you’ll get an idea how how it would look.
The interesting thing though, is that if you obverse how the media portrays beauty, they try all that they can to cover up blemishes, use foundation makeup on everyone, no matter what sex and what age they are, and in more fashion-sensitive publications, they completely get rid of any sign of pores and blemishes. It’s kind of odd how obsessed society is with flawless skin. It’s basically an unrealistic portrayal of beauty, yet everyone strives for it. What complicates it, is the fact that there really are people out there with impeccable skin, and because such rare perfection does exist, it becomes acceptable to try to make everyone look that way–simply because it does exist in nature. If people with flawless skin never existed in this world, we probably wouldn’t try so hard to replicate that kind of perfection.
Everything that the media does to push the boundaries of beauty are directly based on what they’ve seen that’s possible in the rare examples possible in the human race, and they’ve used those rare examples are references for their own attempts at beautifying everything.
Some artists also strive to portray that kind of rare, flawless beauty, while others will try to inject more flaws, to portray what they think is a more natural look. Neither is right or wrong–just different approaches to express one’s own subject ideal of beauty.
Personally, I dislike when a girl wears heavy foundation, because it looks too fake–like she’s wearing a mask. That’s why I tell my wife (who I take tons of photos of for my photography) that I would rather see her skin as natural and imperfect, than caked with foundation and look fake.
But in my artwork, I prefer to depict skin that is naturally flawless–like the kind you often see on young East Asian women (such as celebrity reality shows like “Invincible Youth,” often featuring well-known K-Pop stars without any makeup), where their skin is so fair and radiant that they look almost ethereal, but still very real and natural.
This is all subjective, of course. Just sharing my thoughts on the subject.