The Guardian (USA)

Stella McCartney launches A-Z sustainabi­lity manifesto

- Hannah Marriott

Stella McCartney has launched a sustainabi­lity manifesto in collaborat­ion with artists including Jeff Koons, Ed Ruscha and Cindy Sherman.

Peter Blake, Olafur Eliasson, Alex Israel, Sam Taylor-Johnson, Joana Vasconcelo­s, Chantal Joffe and Rashid Johnson also took part in the project, which takes the form of an A-Z and seeks, in part, to drill down on the meaning of certain terms – from A for accountabl­e to Z for zero waste – in an age of mass greenwashi­ng.

For timelesnes­s, William Eggleston photograph­ed the back of a street sign at night in the shape of the letter T. For repurpose, US artist Taryn Simon found an R-shaped bird poo.

Conceived in lockdown, the A-Z is also an attempt to represent the pillars of Stella McCartney’s business which, she said, will inform all of the company’s future decisions. McCartney presented her collection with the fashion industry in flux, with sales down 15.9% compared with pre-pandemic levels.

The crisis, said McCartney, at a virtual press conference after her digital spring/summer 21 show, “has led to me asking personal questions, such as ‘why do I do what I do?’ and ‘why do women to come to us?’ We have always been conscious that we had a deeper meaning than creativity alone – that we wanted to change the industry for the better.” After some reflection, “we felt really energised and invigorate­d and found the fire to come back fighting”.

“I barely even know what the word sustainabl­e means any more,” she added, with confusion and greenwashi­ng rife in the industry. For the fashion industry to be sustainabl­e, she said, “it has to come from a place of honesty, because it’s not easy to work this way, and give the consumer honest informatio­n and be completely transparen­t. It can’t just be for marketing and because the youth of tomorrow will demand it.”

It came at the end of a strange, socially distanced fashion month in which designers’ attempts to predict what the world will be wearing in six months’ time ranged from celebrator­y party wear to eerie PPE-inspired visors.

McCartney’s take was upbeat. Models were filmed walking around the grounds of Houghton House, in Norfolk, wearing flowing, hot pink dresses, huge hammered brass earrings and thick-soled flip flops which, she said, were made of 50% waste materials. There were Zoom-friendly Anne Boleyn-style necklines on jumpsuits and dresses and innovation­s including “stellawear”, a 99% zero waste shapewear underlayer which also serves as a swimming costume.

With social distancing now a design considerat­ion, “everyone’s like, ‘don’t do eveningwea­r’,” said McCartney, “but for me I definitely think there has to be optimism, we’ve still gotta get dressed up, we’ve gotta come out of this not wearing sweatpants. And we will come out of this.”

 ?? Photograph: See caption ?? Timelessne­ss by William Eggleston shows the back of a street sign at night in the shape of the letter T.
Photograph: See caption Timelessne­ss by William Eggleston shows the back of a street sign at night in the shape of the letter T.
 ?? Photograph: Lauren Maccabee ?? Stella McCartney: ‘I barely even know what the word sustainabl­e means any more.’
Photograph: Lauren Maccabee Stella McCartney: ‘I barely even know what the word sustainabl­e means any more.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States