Happily, it seems Jenner's since gotten over her acne insecurities. Ignoring the negative Twitter babble, she responded to one fan who praised her for "showing up and strutting her acne." "Never let that shit stop you!" she wrote. (Hear, hear.)
Image via @KendallJenner
Image via @KendallJenner
If you follow the acne positivity movement, chances are you follow Em Ford of My Pale Skin. In 2015, the beauty influencer recorded the now-famous video "You Look Disgusting," in which she revealed how much hate she received for showing her real skin. (Unsurprisingly, it quickly went viral.) The #content master's page is full of acne-safe makeup tips, bare-faced selfies and sharp captions. (Her thoughts on the aforementioned KJ Twitter drama? "From one woman with acne to another, thanks [Kendall] for having the courage to stick your middle finger up at the petty-minded idiots of the world.")
Image via @mypaleskinblog
Image via @mypaleskinblog
Photographer and illustrator Peter DeVito's work celebrates those with all different kinds of skin. He's best known for his close-up, unretouched shots of people with acne along with powerful statements about self-acceptance ("Acne is normal," "retouch," etc.) temporarily tattooed across their faces.
"The whole point of me posting is to help empower other people," he told ELLE. "I'm hoping that people will just start to learn to accept themselves more and not compare themselves to what other people look like."
Image via @peterdevito
"The whole point of me posting is to help empower other people," he told ELLE. "I'm hoping that people will just start to learn to accept themselves more and not compare themselves to what other people look like."
Image via @peterdevito
Among DeVito's subjects is Cool Teen™ Leia Immanuel, who's amassed a whopping 94,000-plus Instagram followers thanks to her very good looks, very impressive streetwear collection and very artful, acne-embracing selfies.
Image via @artdr3am
Image via @artdr3am
Leave it to Tavi Gevinson, actress and OG Cool Teen™ (at 15, she founded socially conscious teen magazine "Rookie") to reference contemporary Japanese art in a post about pimple cream.
Image via @tavitulle
Image via @tavitulle