The Morning Call

Gucci pulls ‘blackface’ sweater from stores after complaints

- By Nicole Winfield and Colleen Barry

ROME — Gucci has apologized after complaints that a wool sweater with an oversized collar designed to cover the face resembled blackface makeup, and said the item had been pulled from stores and online.

It was the latest case of a fashion house having to apologize for cultural or racial insensitiv­ity — and further evidence that Italy in particular has a record of racial insensitiv­ity from fashion to soccer to politics.

In a statement posted on Twitter on Wednesday, Gucci said it was committed to diversity and considered it a “fundamenta­l value to be fully upheld, respected and at the forefront of every decision we make.”

The black wool balaclava sweater, which sells for $890 on one site, covers the nose and includes a red cutout for the mouth. It was ridiculed on social media as insensitiv­e and racist at a time when the U.S. is grappling with cases of old photos of politician­s with their faces blackened.

“Gucci deeply apologizes for the offense caused by the wool balaclava jumper,” Gucci said, adding that it intended to turn the incident “into a powerful learning moment for the Gucci team and beyond.”

Gucci, owned by French conglomera­te Kering with an Italian design team, isn’t alone.

In December, Italian designer Prada said it was no longer selling a line of accessorie­s that featured a character with brown skin and exaggerate­d red lips after complaints they resembled blackface.

And last year, Dolce & Gabbana canceled a Shanghai runway show and apologized after promotiona­l videos seen as racist and subsequent insulting Instagram messages stoked a furor in one of the world’s largest markets for luxury goods. The ads featured a Chinese model trying to eat pizza, spaghetti and a cannoli with chopsticks. Racism is particular­ly acute in Italy, where taunts against black players are a regular occurrence at soccer matches and the country’s first black Cabinet minister was subject to repeated insults.

Just last month, a court in Bergamo, northern Italy, convicted a senator from the antimigran­t League party, Roberto Calderoli, of defamation with the aggravatin­g element of racial hatred for having called the former minister, Cecile Kyenge, an “orangutan.”

 ?? AP ?? A screenshot taken from an online fashion outlet shows the Gucci turtleneck black wool balaclava sweater.
AP A screenshot taken from an online fashion outlet shows the Gucci turtleneck black wool balaclava sweater.

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