Corpse paint
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Corpse paint (sometimes spelled corpsepaint) is a style of black-and-white or just white makeup used extensively by black metal bands during live concerts and photo shoots. The makeup is used to intensify the bands' imagery of evil, inhumanity, and corpse-like decay. It is most commonly used just on the face, but also on arms and torso. It can also involve other colors than black and white, red being one example.
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[edit] Definition
Corpse paint generally consists of the musician's face being covered in black and white makeup, with a bigger part of the face being white and with other areas being black. The parts being black are very often in different symmetrical shapes but assymmetrical (being seemingly random painted) occurs as well. The patterns are used as trademarks for the musicians who use corpse paint, and change very seldom. Only rarely do musicians use other colors: Gorgoroth and Ragnarok use blood-colored paint, Attila Csihar of Mayhem and formerly of Tormentor uses neon colours, while the Norwegian band Dødheimsgard has experimented using other colours.
[edit] Origins
Though corpse paint achieved widespread popularity with some rock and roll performers in the 1970s, most famously Kiss and Alice Cooper, there are some earlier precedents worth noting.
Corpse paint might be traced back to Germanic folklore. Particularly striking are the similarities between modern black metal corpse paint and the ghoulish appearance of the members of the Oskorei, a legion of dead souls in Norse mythology. One can also note similarities between metal corpse paint and the makeup worn in expressionist films, such as worn by Conrad Veidt in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.
[edit] History and usage
The earliest rock groups to decorate themselves with makeup similar to corpse paint included Secos e Molhados, Arthur Brown in the 1960s, KISS and Alice Cooper in the 1970s, and, later that decade, punk rockers like The Misfits and singer Dave Vanian of The Damned. The look was also unintentionally popularized in 1977 through a series of McDonald's print advertisement campaigns featuring black-and-white photographs of company mascot Ronald McDonald. In the ads, Ronald's face paint looked very similar to corpse paint, causing fans of bands like KISS to collect and even steal copies of magazines with the ads.
Hellhammer and King Diamond of Mercyful Fate (who used corpse paint as early as 1978 in his band Black Rose) were perhaps the first death or black metal groups to use corpse paint in the early 1980s. Other groups soon followed suit, including Hellhammer's later incarnation Celtic Frost, and early Slayer. Brazilian band Sarcófago also pioneered the look, being dubbed by Metal Storm magazine as the first band with a "true" corpsepaint.[1] Early corpse paint designs were intended simply to accent an individual's features and make them look "dead" (examples include early Slayer). Later designs typically incorporated more detailed patterns to improve a "demonic" look (most notably Immortal and King Diamond).
Norwegian black metal bands from the late 1980s and early '90s (such as Mayhem, Gorgoroth, Emperor, Immortal, Antestor, Darkthrone, and Satyricon) are arguably responsible for maintaining the popularity of the corpse paint among today's black metal acts.
[edit] Corpse paint outside metal
Corpse paint has been associated mainly with black metal and metal in general, but it has inspirated artists in music and other entertainment businesses:
- The Misfits, an influential punk rock band, wore corpse paint and had many lyrics involving horror and science fiction references.
- The Insane Clown Posse are known for their "evil clown" stage makeup, which has direct origins in corpse paint.
- In the fall of 1996, professional wrestler Sting began wearing corpse paint in a persona inspired by the Brandon Lee film The Crow.
- Another professional wrestler The Undertaker wore make-up similar to corpse paint in the mid-90s.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Rate My Corpse Paint Examples of different styles of corpse paint.
- How To Apply Corpse Paint

