The Guardian (USA)

Vogue's Kamala Harris cover photos spark controvers­y: 'Washed out mess'

- Richard Luscombe and Priya Elan

Vogue magazine became embroiled in a “whitewashi­ng” controvers­y on Sunday when it tweeted photograph­s of its February cover star, Kamala Harris.

Two images of the US vice-president-elect were released. One, a fulllength shot in front of what appeared to be a glossy pink silk drape, drew the ire of social media critics.

One user called it a “washed out mess of a cover”.

“Kamala Harris is about as light skinned as women of color come and Vogue still fucked up her lighting,” they wrote.

Others criticized Vogue’s editor-inchief.

“What a mess up,” wrote the New York Times contributo­r Wajahat Ali. “Anna Wintour must really not have Black friends and colleagues. I’ll shoot shots of VP Kamala Harris for free using my Samsung and I’m 100% confident it’ll turn out better than this Vogue cover.”

The August edition of US Vogue, featuring Simone Biles, was criticised for the bad lighting of Biles’ skin tone. “I hate the toning, I hate how predictabl­e they are … and I super-hate that Vogue couldn’t be bothered to hire a black photograph­er,” tweeted Morrigan McCarthy, the national picture editor at the New York Times at the time.

The issue of lighting black skin properly in magazine editorials and on the screen has been an issue for years. In 2019 Melina Matsoukas, director of the film Queen & Slim, said: “There’s a belief in the industry that black skin needs an incredible amount of light or a certain traditiona­l way of lighting in order to be visible, and it’s just not true.”

The black cinematogr­apher Bradford Young, who worked on the film Selma, told Deadline: “I’m never satisfied with the way I see my people photograph­ed in movies. I think it comes from a lack of consciousn­ess – if you grew up in a community where you don’t know black people, I wouldn’t suspect you would photograph them in a concerned way.”

Last year, Wintour apologized to staff members in a letter for “mistakes” in publishing photograph­s and articles seen as insensitiv­e to minorities.

“Vogue has not found enough ways to elevate or give space to Black editors, writers, photograph­ers, designers, and other creators,” Wintour wrote. “We have made mistakes too, publishing images or stories that have been hurtful or intolerant. I want to take full responsibi­lity for those mistakes.”

Vogue denied to the New York Post it had lightened Harris’s skin after the shoot, but the assurance failed to quell the wave of disapprova­l.

“The pic itself isn’t terrible as a pic. It’s just far, far below the standards of

Vogue. They didn’t put thought into it. Like homework finished the morning it’s due,” the LGBTQ activist Charlotte Clymer tweeted.

According to the Post, Harris and her team had control over her clothes, hair and makeup. She chose her own casual black jacket and pants and a pair of Converse Chuck Taylor boots for one photo, a powder blue Michael Kors pantsuit for the other. Each image was shot by Tyler Mitchell, who was 23 when he came to prominence photograph­ing Beyoncé for Vogue in 2018. Mitchell has only posted one image – the Michael Kors one – on to his official

Instagram account.

The Hollywood Reporter has said Harris’s team were “blindsided” that her choice of cover (the one featuring the Michael Kors pantsuit) was not the one the publicatio­n decided to go with. “Harris’s team was unaware that the cover photo had been switched until images leaked late Saturday, according to a person involved in the negotiatio­ns over how Harris would be featured on the cover,” says the article. “The person with knowledge of the negotiatio­ns said Harris’s team has expressed to Vogue its disappoint­ment over the magazine’s decision.”

Vogue has not confirmed which of the two photograph­s it will use for its print cover, or if it will publish both but in a statement, a Vogue spokespers­on told the Guardian: “The team at Vogue loved the images Tyler Mitchell shot and felt the more informal image captured Vice Presidente­lect Harris’s authentic, approachab­le nature -which we feel is one of the hallmarks of the Biden/Harris administra­tion. To respond to the seriousnes­s of this moment in history, and the role she has to play leading our country forward, we’re celebratin­g both images of her as covers digitally.”

Harris’s appearance on the Vogue cover is likely to attract the attention of Donald Trump, who complained last month that his model wife, the first lady, Melania Trump, had not graced a single magazine cover in his four years in the White House, having been snubbed by “elitist snobs” in the fashion industry.

The previous first lady, Michelle Obama, featured in numerous fashion shoots, including the cover of Vogue in December 2016.

 ?? Photograph: Chip Somodevill­a/Getty Images ?? The vice-president-elect, Kamala Harris. She and her team reportedly had control over her clothes, hair and makeup for the shoot.
Photograph: Chip Somodevill­a/Getty Images The vice-president-elect, Kamala Harris. She and her team reportedly had control over her clothes, hair and makeup for the shoot.

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