ACH week, Leo Jimenez, a 25-year-old New Yorker,
sifts through a mound of invitations, pulling out the handful that
seem most promising. On back-to-back nights earlier this month, he
dropped in to Lotus on West 14th Street for the unveiling of a new
fashion line, and turned up at the opening of Crobar, a dance club
in Chelsea, mingling with stars like Rosie Perez, long-stemmed
models and middle-aged roués trussed in dinner jackets. Wherever he
goes, Mr. Jimenez himself is an object of fascination. "You get the
buttonhole," he said. "You get the table, you get the
attention."
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Mr. Jimenez, a model, has appeared in ads for Levi's, DKNY and
Aldo, but he is anything but a conventional pretty face. His steeply
raked cheekbones, dreadlocks and jet-colored eyes, suggest a
background that might be Mongolian, American Indian or Chinese. In
fact he is Colombian by birth, a product of that country's mixed
racial heritage, and he fits right in with the melting-pot aesthetic
of the downtown scene. It is also a look that is reflected in the
latest youth marketing trend: using faces that are ethnically
ambiguous.
Ad campaigns for Louis Vuitton, YSL Beauty and H&M stores
have all purposely highlighted models with racially indeterminate
features. Or consider the careers of movie stars like Vin Diesel,
Lisa Bonet and Jessica Alba, whose popularity with young audiences
seems due in part to the tease over whether they are black, white,
Hispanic, American Indian or some combination.
"Today what's ethnically neutral, diverse or ambiguous has
tremendous appeal," said Ron Berger, the chief executive of Euro
RSCG MVBMS Partners in New York, an advertising agency and trend
research company whose clients include Polaroid and Yahoo. "Both in
the mainstream and at the high end of the marketplace, what is
perceived as good, desirable, successful is often a face whose
heritage is hard to pin down."
Ambiguity is chic, especially among the under-25 members of
Generation Y, the most racially diverse population in the nation's
history. Teen People's current issue, devoted to beauty, features
makeovers of girls whose backgrounds are identified on full-page
head shots as "Puerto Rican and Italian-American" and
"Finnish-German-Irish- and Scotch-American."
"We're seeing more of a desire for the exotic, left-of-center
beauty that transcends race or class," Amy Barnett, the magazine's
managing editor, said. It "represents the new reality of America,
which includes considerable mixing," she added. "It is changing the
face of American beauty."
Nearly seven million Americans identified themselves as members
of more than one race in the 2000 census, the first time respondents
were able to check more than one category. In addition, more than 14
million Latinos — about 42 percent of Latino respondents — ignored
the census boxes for black or white and checked "some other race,"
an indication, experts said, of the mixed-race heritage of many
Hispanics — with black, white and indigenous Indian strains in the
mix.
The increasingly multiracial American population, demographers
say, is due to intermarriage and waves of immigration. Mixed-race
Americans tend to be young — those younger than 18 were twice as
likely as adults to identify themselves as multiracial on the
census.
"The younger the age group, the more diverse the population,"
said Gregory Spencer, who heads the Census Bureau's population
projections branch.
It is no surprise that the acceptance of a melting-pot chic is
greater in places like downtown New York, where immigrants and young
people flood in. On a recent evening Pedro Freyre, 26, an artist of
French, Mexican and Spanish heritage, was strolling there with his
cap tilted to accentuate his cheekbones. "We are the new mix," Mr.
Freyre said, borrowing the language of the D.J. booth. "We are the
remix."
Mr. Jimenez, the model, said that being perceived as a racial
hybrid "has definitely opened doors for me." He added, "suddenly
there is a demand for my kind of face."
Ahmed Akkad, 44, a New York artist who is Turkish and Albanian,
said that being an ethnic composite "sometimes gives you an edge, a
certain sexual appeal."