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My gothic revival | Financial Times Accessibility helpSkip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footer Cookies on FT Sites We use cookies for a number of reasons, such as keeping FT Sites reliable and secure, personalising content and ads, providing social media features and to analyse how our Sites are used. Accept & continue Manage cookies Sign In Subscribe Open side navigation menuOpen search bar Financial Times myFT Search the FTSearchClose search bar Home World Sections World Home Global Economy UK US China Africa Asia Pacific Emerging Markets Europe Americas Middle East & North Africa Australia & NZ War in Ukraine Most Read Russia chokes major oil pipeline in further threat to global supplies Nato to provide Ukraine with defences against chemical and nuclear weapons England changes lateral flow test guidance before April 1 target date US and European allies to escalate sanctions on Russia Scientists debate fourth Covid vaccine dose as Omicron cases rise UK Sections UK Home UK Business & Economy UK Politics & Policy Brexit UK Companies Personal Finance Most Read Rishi Sunak banks public finances windfall for pre-election tax cut UK inflation accelerates to 30-year high of 6.2% Chancellor provides minimal help to households on cost of living crisis England changes lateral flow test guidance before April 1 target date Sunak to keep part of windfall cash despite appeals to cushion cost of living crisis Companies Sections Companies Home Energy Financials Health Industrials Media Professional Services Retail & Consumer Tech Sector Telecoms Transport Most Read JPMorgan chief faces rare investor criticism over spending plans Trafigura’s finance chief warns of commodity industry stress Evergrande bondholders threaten to sue after being blindsided by $2bn claim Boston Consulting Group sues GameStop claiming $30mn in unpaid fees Nestlé to halt sales of most brands in Russia Tech Markets Sections Markets Home Alphaville Markets Data Capital Markets Commodities Currencies Equities Fund Management Trading Moral Money ETF Hub Cryptocurrencies Most Read Ukraine war news from March 23: US says Russia committed war crimes in Ukraine, Russia to switch gas invoicing to roubles for European buyers Ukraine war latest: G7 to crack down on Russia’s ability to sell its gold Traders warn of looming global diesel shortage The pendulum of globalisation is swinging back Wealthy Russian property owners leave Manhattan with a whisper Climate Opinion Sections Opinion Home Columnists The FT View The Big Read Lex Obituaries Letters Most Read The west is rash to assume the world is on its side over Ukraine The dark side of using AI to design drugs The end of the necktie and the last stylish man We should not abandon Russian citizens to a culture of brutality Sunak tries to restore his fortunes with help for Tory targets Work & Careers Sections Work & Careers Home Business School Rankings Business Education Entrepreneurship Recruitment Business Books Business Travel Most Read What makes staff want to leave their jobs? 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The strange death of the salutation Entrepreneurs must pay attention to what’s on investors’ minds Sun, sea or salary: Citi recruits’ future of work trade-off Life & Arts Sections Life & Arts Home Arts Books Food & Drink FT Magazine House & Home Style Travel FT Globetrotter Most Read The end of the necktie and the last stylish man The world needs to come clean about dirty money Frank Gehry: ‘The more humane a building, the better’ Where to find great womenswear for ‘normal’ people Why San Francisco turned sour on Uber, Lyft and other ride-hailing apps How to Spend It Sign In Subscribe MenuSearch Home World UK Companies Tech Markets Climate Opinion Work & Careers Life & Arts How to Spend ItFinancial Times Sign In Subscribe Search the FTSearchClose search bar Your guide to a disrupted world Subscribe How To Spend It  Beauty Add to myFT My gothic revival One writer revisits the moody – and enduring – fashion subculture she once belonged to © The author in 1988 Share on twitter (opens new window) Share on facebook (opens new window) Share on linkedin (opens new window) Share on whatsapp (opens new window) Save Share on twitter (opens new window) Share on facebook (opens new window) Share on linkedin (opens new window) Share on whatsapp (opens new window) Save Helen Barrett Jump to comments sectionPrint this page My complexion is ashen; my eyes are rimmed with black; my hair has been crimped and backcombed into the texture of Ryvita; my lips are oxblood-red. In photographs from the late 1980s, I am part Theda Bara, part deranged clown-doll. I would not have called myself a goth, but I clearly was. The look was a big commitment – it took me two hours. As an 18-year-old student, I wore it every day, getting up early to allow time for hair and make-up before lectures. It was a kind of ironic anti-beauty. In a decade of high-gloss glamour and a preoccupation with physical fitness, I wanted to look undead. In fact, I was late. The goth aesthetic – horror-inflected, often genderless, lots of black – had been around since the late ’70s and it has never really gone away. Rick Owens SS22 © Go Runway Goth is global, but England has always been its heartland, with an early post-punk scene centred around clubs like the Batcave in London and Le Phonographique in Leeds. In the late 20th century, goth rose again with Emo. Now it spooks high streets in crowds of E-Kids. There is an annual goth gathering in Whitby, north Yorkshire – a setting in Bram Stoker’s Dracula – where middle-aged apparitions mix with TikTok teens, and even an annual World Goth Day in May. From Siouxsie Sioux to Eric Draven, goths endure because their look is a kind of folk art: elaborate, yes, but open to everyone, however they define themselves.  Siouxsie and The Banshees on the TV show The Tube I remember using charcoal on my eyelids “Goth has always been a subculture about androgyny,” says Catherine Spooner, professor of literature and culture at Lancaster University. “Teenagers who might be discovering their gender and sexual identity still find a welcome home in goth. They can experiment.” Today, she adds, goth also manifests itself in drag culture, in artists such as Sharon Needles and Charity Kase, whose extreme goth-art make-up features appendages such as horns, tubes and surreal masks. “It’s part of what’s called Alternative Drag – an exchange between different subcultures. And high fashion is picking up on it because it’s exciting.” She is right. Goth-inflected make-up and hair haunted the spring/summer 2022 shows. Rick Owens sent out pale-faced, electric-haired cyber-goths in exaggerated platform boots, while Valentino’s models had bleached eyebrows, dark winged liner and deep-red lips. A look from Givenchy’s SS22 collection © Go Runway Gothic elements also feature in Valentino’s SS22 collection © Go Runway Givenchy’s show make-up, too, included coal-black, panda-ringed eyes inspired by manga and E-Girl and designed by Lucia Pieroni. “The look was created using liquid liner to enlarge the eye and add drama with scratchy, feathered lines,” says the brand’s national make-up artist Claire Mulleady. It took time to achieve symmetry, but “there is a feeling of spontaneity to the strokes of liner and an importance in not labouring over each line exactly”. Dark matter Byredo Kajal Pencil Kali Kali, £26 Dior Vernis nail lacquer 970 Nuit 1947, £22 Chanel Le Volume Ultra Noir mascara, £30  Chantecaille Le Stylo Ultra Slim black eyeliner, £30 Hermès Satin lipstick Rouge H, £58 Mulleady’s trick to replicating the look is to first map out the shape, using a light pencil such as an eyebrow pencil. “Keep your eyes open so that the liner fits the eye shape and sits above the socket line.” Then, with Givenchy’s Liner Disturbia, trace over the line and add flicks to the outside of the shape. Apply mascara to the top lashes, or false lashes for extra depth. For models, goth make-up means extra patience. Nassia Matsa, a Greek model with ethereal looks, has featured in recent goth-inflected campaigns by Balenciaga among others. “I had a goth-inspired photoshoot on Tuesday. Today is Thursday and I’m still trying to take the make-up off,” she says. “And I had to sit very still while they drew the eye lines.” Matsa says her introduction to goth has led her to try a version of the look that works with the classic clothes she favours in her everyday life, such as Chanel suits. “I wear dark eyeshadow to give that look a darkness. I even have natural dark-eye circles that I’m trying to make more distinctive. I want to advertise them, not hide them.” We early goths didn’t have make-up artists’ tips or tools. In the ’80s, I remember using charcoal on my eyelids, bulk-buying a dark-purple lipstick called Black Cherries and stealing my mother’s scraps of Mary Quant black-paste block mascara for clumpy, tarantula eyelashes.  Rose McDowall, half of ’80s Scottish goth-pop duo Strawberry Switchblade, recalls resorting to even lower tech for dramatic stage make-up. “I used to do rainbow-coloured eye make-up, but used felt-tip pens. And I used to put cheap foundation and talcum powder on top of it. Make-up was all about shiny stuff, but I liked matte. So I had to use a lot of old ’60s make-up with lead in it.” She adds: “My influences were flamenco dancers, Minnie Mouse and Hammer Horror films – comedy, but also the darker side of life.” Recommended FT SeriesHow To Spend It spring fashion special Lip gloss you’ll want to pout about Goth is associated with misery. So why is it back now? Says Spooner: “There’s a tendency to map gothic looks onto the current anxiety – a pandemic, an economic crisis – but I think that’s problematic. It doesn’t take into account that this is a subculture that has lasted 40 years, and a cultural tradition that goes back 250 years. You can’t just pin it on a news story.” Returning to my old photographs, I am struck by how happy I am with my self-imagined, elaborate and very time-consuming image. I ditched the crimpers and the charcoal long ago, but the call of the undead was a lot of fun. It still is. Get alerts on Beauty when a new story is publishedGet alerts Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2022. All rights reserved. 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