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Mexico City’s Buttock Augmentation: A History of Beauty Standards

by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor

Teh Mysterious Math Behind the Brazilian Butt Lift

The quest for the “ideal” female form has⁤ fueled a booming industry in cosmetic surgery,and nowhere is this more evident than in the world ‌of buttock augmentation.While ​often associated with Brazil, the foundations of this practise – and the surprisingly rigid standards defining a desirable posterior – were laid ​decades ago in Mexico City.​ It began with‍ surgeon ​Mario ‌González-Ulloa,⁢ who‍ in the 1960s first implanted ​silicone designed specifically for the buttocks. He earned the title “grandfather ⁤of buttock augmentation” according to the textbook Body Sculpting with Silicone Implants.

By the early 2000s,​ a new generation ⁣of surgeons were refining the ⁢art, most notably ‍Ramón Cuenca-Guerra. ‍In a 2004 paper, “What⁢ Makes Buttocks Beautiful?” Cuenca-Guerra attempted⁢ to codify attractiveness, ‍outlining four characteristics that “determine⁢ attractive buttocks” and identifying five‍ distinct “defects” with corresponding corrective strategies. He even categorized a particular downturn​ as⁣ “defect type 5,” the “senile buttock,”⁣ visually​ contrasted in González-Ulloa’s work with the “happy buttock”-high, rounded, and ​dimpled.

However, the methodology behind these determinations proved unsettling. Cuenca-Guerra’s standards weren’t born from global consensus, but‌ from subjective judgment. His research involved presenting 1,320 photographs of nude ⁣women aged 20 to 35, viewed from behind, to a⁣ panel of just six‌ plastic surgeons. These surgeons “pointed ⁢out which buttocks they ⁤considered attractive ⁤and harmonious, and features on which this attractiveness depended.”

The pursuit ⁣of mathematically defining⁢ beauty didn’t stop at the buttocks. Cuenca-Guerra, alongside colleague José Luis Daza-Flores (who studied under him, becoming, as one observer put it, “the son of buttock augmentation”), extended​ their focus to the lower leg. Their paper, “Calf Implants,” mirrored the approach taken with the buttocks, identifying “the anatomical characteristics that make calves look‍ attractive” and the “defects” requiring correction. This involved another extensive visual survey – 2,600 images of female legs, scrutinized by ‍plastic surgeons.

The ⁢research⁣ took an unexpected‌ turn when the authors​ attempted to link these perceived⁣ ideals ​to the “divine proportion,” also known ⁢as the golden ratio (approximately 1.6 to 1). This mathematical concept, where the ratio of the ⁤whole⁢ to the larger part is the same as the⁣ larger part to the smaller part, has been historically‍ applied to art and architecture, including the proportions of the “ideal” ‌face in⁣ ancient Greek aesthetics.⁤ The ⁢authors ⁣sought to⁣ demonstrate that‌ attractive⁣ legs‍ conformed to this ratio.

the paper included statements like, “Seventeen women had thin legs, in the ​shape of a tube, and a mere 1:1.618 ⁤ratio in the A-P and L-L projections,” a description that, according to one​ interpretation, precisely describes​ cankles. While the ​specifics remain complex, the attempt to quantify beauty through mathematical formulas highlights the lengths to which surgeons have ⁤gone to standardize and‌ surgically achieve a visually “ideal” female figure – a figure defined not⁤ by nature, but by the subjective preferences‌ of a small group of surgeons.

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