Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Michelle Obama’s legacy of style

First Lady’s clothes were part of the fashion conversati­on, writes ROBIN GIVHAN

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AT THE HayAdams, members of Washington DC’s diplomatic community gathered inside the historic hotel’s glass-walled loft, with its postcard views of the White House, for a conversati­on about clothes and their place on the world stage.

The programme, hosted by the State Department and Elle magazine, included a panel discussion that featured designer Derek Lam. When the conversati­on came around to First Lady Michelle Obama – because how could it not? – Lam lamented: “Her departure from the East Wing signals the end of a singular era for American fashion.”

During her tenure, Obama brought widespread attention to Seventh Avenue. She energised designers, editors and stylists with her fashion-forward wardrobe choices. She made industry insiders stand taller both at home and abroad. She’s been an exemplar of modern, fit and confident middle age. She instilled pride and kinship among countless black women.

And she has been the most high-profile cheerleade­r for the sleeveless sheath as the 21st century power uniform. “It’s been accepted everywhere,” says designer Maria Pinto, who created many of Obama’s 2008 campaign dresses, including the purple sheath she wore when she fist-bumped the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee.

“You don’t have to be in a suit. There’s other ways to get that power look.”

Lam is among the many Seventh Avenue designers whose clothes have been part of the First Lady’s public wardrobe and whose life story has been fundamenta­l to her version of fashion diplomacy.

Obama wore Lam’s block-printed dress for her arrival in Beijing in March 2014. The black dress, with a geometric pattern in ivory and taupe, was contempora­ry in its design, sophistica­ted and sleek. But there was more: Lam, who grew up in San Francisco, is of Chinese descent.

In wearing his design, Obama quietly noted that in addition to trade agreements and intellectu­al property concerns, there is a very real, human connection between the US and China.

For the Obamas’ first state dinner, in honour of India, she wore a white strapless gown by the Indian American designer Naeem Khan. In 2011, she donned British brands Preen and Roksanda for a visit to London. But for the grand occasion of a state dinner at Buckingham Palace, Obama wore a regal white gown and long white gloves by an American designer, Tom Ford – but one with business roots in London, where he also maintains a home.

She wore a flowing violet gown by Japan-born designer Tadashi Shoji, whose business is based in Los Angeles, to a state dinner in honour of Japan, a dress by Korean American designer Doo-Ri Chung for the South Korea state dinner and a student-designed frock to a White House education workshop on careers in the fashion industry.

Her fashion choices served as a grace note to the moment.

Her clothes were unexpected: a cardigan to meet Queen Elizabeth; a Vera Wang mermaid gown at the China state dinner. The pictures are captivatin­g. But are they the totality of her fashion legacy?

When Obama leaves the White House in January, what will she leave behind besides covers of Vogue and an impressive array of evening gowns destined for a presidenti­al library?

Obama was good for fashion. Mostly because she got people talking about it. But look closely and see that the bright light she shone on fashion also revealed the challenges of a business that traffics in glamour and fantasy.

Her mid-market wardrobe choices sparked sales. But her attentions could not save those same brands from the financial pressures of a recession or over-expansion.

She underscore­d how most fashion companies are entreprene­urial endeavours, not big publicly traded corporatio­ns; they are the very definition of small businesses.

She thrust once little-known brands – Jason Wu, Brandon Maxwell, Azede Jean-Pierre, Narciso Rodriguez, Maria Cornejo, Pinto – into the spotlight, giving them priceless publicity and a leg up in expanding their business. But press notices cannot form the foundation of a company.

She helped young people see that fashion is more than catwalk extravagan­zas. In October 2014, she brought fashion designers to the White House as part of her education initiative Reach Higher.

And she connected fashion to the broader popular culture.

A good portion of the population has always been stubbornly committed to the idea that clothes don’t matter and to give them more than a moment’s considerat­ion is evidence of superficia­lity, snobbishne­ss or weak character. But dressing with considerat­ion and care is part of the social contract. It is part of what makes a civil society.

And in the largely symbolic role of first lady, Obama turned fashion into an especially eloquent form of communicat­ion.

She made people anticipate fashion, notice it, wonder about the folk who made it. The conversati­on mainly focused on aesthetics and authorship. Fashion in the Obama administra­tion was not a source of scandal or ethics investigat­ions, as it was during the Reagan era when the first lady was taken to task for borrowing and not returning designer fare.

Obama was buying her clothes, not the taxpayers. Her first inaugural gown, the white one with its single strap and romantic embroidery, is displayed at the National Museum of American History. Other gowns were stored at the National Archives until they were recently shipped to Chicago.

In countless state appearance­s, Michelle Obama highlighte­d the best that Seventh Avenue had to offer, in the same way that one might expect the White House to offer the non plus ultra of American culinary skill at a state dinner, or present the most accomplish­ed musicians.

Even for a style-conscious first lady, her relationsh­ip to fashion is complicate­d. Obama did not rely on a single designer as a de facto personal dressmaker, as had been the case with her most recent predecesso­rs. Reagan favored the late James Galanos; Barbara Bush was a fan of Arnold Scaasi, and both Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton came to rely on Oscar de la Renta. Obama had no such loyalties.

When she first stepped on to the national stage, Obama, a Chicago native, relied heavily on the simple, sleeveless sheaths of hometown designer Maria Pinto. And once in the White House, certain designers became staples in her wardrobe – Khan, Rodriguez, Wu, Michael Kors, Tracy Reese. But she pulled from a wide range of collection­s.

The result was a wardrobe that spoke eloquently about an entire industry.

The country’s interest in Obama’s clothes began during the 2008 presidenti­al campaign. The fascinatio­n increased once she became First Lady, in part because she didn’t dress like the stereotypi­cal Washington matron in boxy suits, nude pantyhose and sensible pumps.

Her favourite accessory was a wide, embellishe­d Azzedine Alaia belt that emphasised her hourglass figure. She did not wear pantyhose. She wore over-the-knee suede boots. She stood out, not because she was setting trends or even leading the charge in embracing those offered up by the fashion industry. She simply looked engaged with fashion. Her clothes were part of the fashion conversati­on. She looked modern.

The mainstream media, bloggers and Twitter celebrated her clothes and, as with any celebrity christened a style icon, Obama had the ability to spark a shopping frenzy

Still, while she could ignite a run on J Crew cardigans and pencil skirts, one can’t ignore this reality: J Crew has also been suffering financiall­y. In the afterglow of the 2013 inaugurati­on, sales have been spiralling downward. Company executives have attributed the decline to the quality of the merchandis­e and a fashion pointof-view that has been off the mark. Customers don’t want what J. Crew is selling despite its having one of the world’s biggest celebritie­s as a customer.

There is also the case of Pinto, who garnered extraordin­ary attention thanks to Obama’s patronage. Yet in 2010, Pinto closed her company and filed for bankruptcy. In 2013, she relaunched as M2057 under a new business model.

And consider Rodriguez, who designed the black-and-red dress Obama wore on election night in 2008 that appeared on front pages around the world. Even as Obama continued to wear his clothes, his business teetered on the edge of closing before it began to right itself in 2012.

Obama can turn a spotlight on a designer. But she has not been an antidote to a recession, overextend­ed finances, bad luck or poor choices. No one could be. That was not her intent. As much as Obama’s clothes have been rich with symbolism, the East Wing has been reluctant to discuss the thought that goes into her fashion choices. Her office rarely announced, confirmed or mentioned the designer of her attire except for occasions of historical significan­ce, such as inaugurati­ons or state dinners. But even then, the statement was hardly more than a single sentence, with the sparest details about the dress and the designer.

For the Italy state dinner, the White House noted: “Tonight, Mrs Obama is wearing a floor-length, rose gold chain mail gown designed by Atelier Versace.”

Details of Obama’s fashion selections were typically shared by flattered designers who took to social media, an observant reporter who managed to identify the garment from a runway collection or a savvy publicist who trumpeted the news. Obama didn’t dress and tell. But she offered the public something more than silk and satin to consider.

What was it about Obama’s clothes that kept people talking? What made critics roar over her bare arms when she wore a sleeveless, eggplant-colored Narciso Rodriguez dress to her husband’s first address to Congress?

Obama was not the first presidenti­al spouse to go sleeveless in the Capitol. Jackie Kennedy had done so decades earlier.

But Kennedy was not a statuesque black woman with muscular arms. The fascinatio­n with Obama’s style has not simply been about the clothes, but the body in them.

A lot of people had never seen a black woman so confidentl­y glamorous – one who had not won an Oscar or a Grammy or spent her profession­al life raising Cain on reality television.

Obama was not model-thin; she wasn’t an ingenue. She was a grownup with an impressive résumé staking her claim on fashion. She was a unicorn on the political circuit.

And she was strong. Folks could literally see her strength in her arms. A small industry developed around them, with more than a few personal trainers declaring they knew the secret to sculpted triceps. Obama began a rewrite of what a strong black woman looked like that had nothing to do with the Hollywood tropes of long-suffering maternal types, sassy broads or joyless uniformed functionar­ies.

There remain those who cling to stereotype­s, who use racist imagery to describe her and who assess her body as if it were on an auction block. The rewrite is a work in progress.

It wasn’t that women like Obama didn’t already exist. They did. Her Chicago social circle was filled with women who shopped at the upper echelons of fashion, who saw vanity as a form of empowermen­t.

She was their representa­tive on the world stage.

And her wardrobe choices underscore­d a simple but often overlooked aspect of fashion: it should be a confidence-building pleasure, not a burden.

Other first ladies have expressed their gratitude to Seventh Avenue for keeping them looking tastefully appropriat­e or have been supportive of industry initiative­s aimed at breast cancer research or the prevention of heart disease. Hillary Clinton recognised fashion’s philanthro­py as first lady. And back in the 1960s, Lady Bird Johnson hosted a White House fashion show to highlight American style and to boost the economy.

Obama engaged in a different, broader kind of conversati­on that was about the challenges and aesthetics of fashion and its role in the economy, in diplomacy and in our daily lives. Her clothes reflected fashion’s global reach and the reality that American designers come from all over the world. She spoke as much to fashion’s insiders as she did to everyone else.

Obama has done a lot towards normalisin­g our relationsh­ip with fashion. Still, the industry does not stand equally alongside other branches of popular culture. “I don’t know anything about fashion” remains an acceptable answer from our leaders to a question about Seventh Avenue. But should it be? Shouldn’t the occupant of the West Wing at least express curiosity and excitement about an industry that churns out some $350 billion (R4 950bn) in sales in this country?

It falls to the next residents of the White House – one of whom is a former model – to bring fashion fully into the fold. And doing so requires not just selecting a wardrobe that reflects occasion, personalit­y and modernity, it means being willing to discuss it, maybe not in depth and certainly not ad nauseam, but with ease and thoughtful­ness.

If an all-star baseball game can get a visit from the Commander in Chief, why not the opening of Fashion Week in New York? If we believe that personalit­y traits can be gleaned from the way a politician plays basketball or golf, surely clothes can be just as evocative. And if it’s worth it to ask: “What’s on your summer reading list?”, why not also inquire: “What’s new in your closet?” – Washington Post.

 ?? PICTURES: WASHINGTON POST ?? First Lady Michelle Obama has made the sleeveless sheath the 21st century power uniform.
PICTURES: WASHINGTON POST First Lady Michelle Obama has made the sleeveless sheath the 21st century power uniform.

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