The Hamilton Spectator

Exhibition explores legacy of black fashion designers

- LEANNE ITALIE

As a girl, Tracy Reese thought she might be an architect. Then she caught the fashion bug.

She knew, of course, that designers who are black like her existed. She used to snap up Willi Smith at The Limited growing up in Detroit. She headed to New York with high hopes.

“When I first came to New York my eyes were really opened to the breadth of the industry, but I was looking for our place in it,” recalled Reese, who has dressed first lady Michelle Obama.

Reese, along with other noted designers of colour, Jeffrey Banks and Laura Smalls among them, spoke at the recent opening of a new exhibition, “Black Fashion Designers,” at The Museum of the Fashion Institute of Technology.

Running through May 16, the show offers a glimpse into exactly how impactful designers of colour have been through the decades, including Reese, Banks and Smalls. Smalls has seen her dresses worn seven times by the departing Obama.

They also know the challenges of striving for beauty in design while attempting to break through in an industry still dominated by whites.

“Designers of colour don’t get a lot of publicity and so many of the businesses are not sizable. It’s tough to get recognitio­n,” Reese said, standing amid rows of mannequins spanning decades of diverse black voices in fashion.

Reese’s father provided initial startup money when she first went into business for herself.

“I had to go out and get loans. I did a lot of paper writing. A lot of business planning. I had to have a lot of assistance because I didn’t have business training,” she said. “That’s usually what a banker wants to see, or a financial person. It’s a kind of closed industry. And as difficult as it is for a person of colour, you really have to rise through the ranks high enough to grab the attention of the people who are holding the purse strings.”

Smalls, who grew up in Queens, knew at 8 or 9 that she wanted to be a fashion designer. She went to the High School of Art and Design, followed by Parsons School of Design.

“When I graduated Parsons, being African-American, it was not easy for me to get a job. It was just not easy. I couldn’t fathom that I would be able to support myself with my own collection. They don’t say anything. I mean, you know. It’s just you don’t get the job. I could tell you a horrible story, but I won’t,” said Smalls, who worked in relative obscurity until 2012, when Obama first wore some of her pieces.

Banks, 63, has focused on menswear over his decades in the business, adding home decor and children’s wear in more recent years selling on HSN. “I was very lucky in that I met Ralph Lauren when I was 16. I started working for him when I was 17, three weeks out of high school and two months before I started college.” Even so, it wasn’t easy. “I remember when I was 10 years old and talking to a former nursery school teacher and telling her that I wanted to be a fashion designer and she said, ‘Well whoever heard of a black fashion designer,’ and she was black,” said Banks, who was raised in Washington, D.C.

“I was so angry, even at 10 years old, to think ‘why would someone say something like that?’”

Banks looked to those who came before him, but his eye was on the beauty of their creations, not necessaril­y their skin colour.

Jacqueline Bouvier must have thought so, too. In 1953, she wore an ivory silk taffeta gown to marry the young Sen. John F. Kennedy. It was designed by Ann Lowe, already a noted dressmaker for high society patrons in New York.

Lowe was also the great-granddaugh­ter of an enslaved woman and an Alabama plantation owner. She learned to sew at the knees of her mother and grandmothe­r.

“Yet she embraced all of the beauty of European couture,” said Andre Leon Talley, the former editorat-large for Vogue who served on the show’s advisory committee.

The exhibition is intended as a sampling of black contributi­ons to fashion, but it does offer a wide range, from a modest ivory wedding gown by Lowe (not Jackie’s) to a risque royal blue satin Playboy bunny uniform by Zelda Wynn Valdes.

 ?? EILEEN COSTA, NYT ?? Garments created by designers of African descent at “Black Fashion Designers," at the Fashion Institute of Technology’s museum in New York. The show packs a wide cultural range into a relatively small ground-floor space.
EILEEN COSTA, NYT Garments created by designers of African descent at “Black Fashion Designers," at the Fashion Institute of Technology’s museum in New York. The show packs a wide cultural range into a relatively small ground-floor space.
 ?? SETH WENIG, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Designer Tracy Reese: “I had to go out and get loans. I did a lot of paper writing. A lot of business planning. I had to have a lot of assistance because I didn’t have business training.”
SETH WENIG, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Designer Tracy Reese: “I had to go out and get loans. I did a lot of paper writing. A lot of business planning. I had to have a lot of assistance because I didn’t have business training.”

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