Toronto Star

Designers bring political resistance to catwalk

Fashion folks bring protest and shine their spotlight on fierce new movements

- ROBIN GIVHAN THE WASHINGTON POST

“This is what I’m doing when people are paying attention to me.”

MARA HOFFMAN DESIGNER

NEW YORK— T-shirts, buttons and baseball caps symbolize fashion’s political awakening. So do velvet, billowing satin and bedazzled bodices.

Fashion’s message of power unfolds as poetry. Pure outrage has given way to resistance.

The designer Mara Hoffman organized nearly two dozen fashion industry folks to accompany her to Women’s March in Washington and helped raised funds for the rally. She was hardly a newbie protester, but she returned to Seventh Ave. inspired and energized.

“The turnout was unbelievab­le to me. There was this kind of ‘holy cow’ moment; these women just pulled off something I’ve never seen before,” Hoffman said in an interview before her Monday afternoon show. “In response to seeing that incredible thing happening, how do you continue that?”

Specifical­ly, how does a fashion designer add to the momentum? Can fashion even do such a thing and not have it be awkward, ponderous or silly? Beginning with the menswear shows earlier this month, the runways here have been filled with examples of designers expressing their political point-of-view, their outrage at the Trump administra­tion, their melancholy over the direction of the country, their fears.

But after catharsis, what comes next? “We all got so revved up, but what do we do when we go home?” she said.

Hoffman decided to invite Bob Bland, Linda Sarsour, Carmen Perez and Tamika Mallory — the women who took the lead in organizing the march in Washington — to participat­e in her runway show. Hoffman wanted them there to speak, to underscore their leadership and highlight their strength — as well as celebrate their beauty.

“This is what I’m doing with my spotlight,” Hoffman said. “This is what I’m doing when people are paying attention to me.”

What are other designers doing when the cameras are pointed at their runway and everyone is leaning in to hear what they have to say?

Designer Tracy Reese took the lead in an initiative sponsored by the Council of Fashion Designers of America to highlight the role Planned Parenthood plays in providing medical services in various communitie­s. At a host of shows, designers are handing out bright pink buttons that read, “Fashion stands with Planned Parenthood.” But for the presentati­on of her fall 2017 collection, which was set in a cosy townhouse in the West Village, she did more. She invited four female poets — Dorothea Lasky, Aja Monet, Leslie Reese and Jenny Zhang — to read personal works of inspiratio­n and determinat­ion as her models posed in a salon-like setting.

It was a beautiful, lustrous and joyful collection. And the poetry and sense of dignified resistance was at one with the clothes.

For a designer such as Prabal Gu- rung, who regularly dedicates his work to the strength and grace of women, an even more overt examinatio­n of female power was at the core of his finale.

He followed a collection of thick, ivory knits, colourful fur coats, sleek printed dresses and ribbed knit dresses — shown on sample-size models as well as plus-size ones — with a finale in which all the models wore T-shirts bearing declaratio­ns of defiance, personal identity and resistance. The future is female. Stay woke. Love is love. I am a Gloria. I am a Malala. You can’t stop me.

A long parade of models walked slowly. John Lennon’s “Imagine” played over the sound system. Each footfall audible. It was a powerful moment, but one that was separate and distinct from the fall collection that had preceded it. This wasn’t political fashion but a designer recognizin­g the volume of his microphone and the irresistib­le allure of fashion. Dao-Yi Chow and Maxwell Osborne, the designers behind Public School, also used their runway show to communicat­e their politics. In keeping with the urban, somewhat gritty, edge to their work, their gestures felt more confrontat­ional, angrier — blunt but not particular­ly eloquent. Mixed in with the parkas and oversized plaid shirts and deconstruc­ted sweat shirts were pullovers printed on the back with “We need leaders” and on the front, a picture of Michael Jordan — an athlete who was famous for much of his career for refusing to take a political stance.

Models also wore red baseball caps that read “Make America New York.” Cheekiness aside, is that really the goal? Plenty of folks had issues with this city long before the recent election and would just as soon infuse America with more Midwestern hospitalit­y or California ease.

Sometimes fashion — like average individual­s — gets in the way of its own point.

But fashion is unique and peculiar. People look to it as a form of escapism, but they also expect it to be responsibl­e and responsive to its customers. Fashion reflects contempora­ry life. But it can do so in a way that is uplifting and joyful, Hoffman notes.

That’s what the best of these collection­s did. They captivated the eye, touched the heart and reasoned with the intellect. They didn’t shout or mock. But they made their position plain.

 ?? ROBIN GIVHAN/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Robert James wanted to incorporat­e the spirit of marches and defiance in his collection By Robert James.
ROBIN GIVHAN/THE WASHINGTON POST Robert James wanted to incorporat­e the spirit of marches and defiance in his collection By Robert James.

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