#Legend

DO THE CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN?

With a penchant for skirts, sequins and pussy-bow blouses alongside tailored suits and skinny jeans, singer and actor HARRY STYLES has become the poster boy for gender-fluid fashion. explores this gradual shift in cultural norms and why we should all be c

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AST NOVEMBER, HARRY STYLES made fashion history by being the first solo man to grace the cover of American Vogue – and he did so while wearing a rather lovely frock. Dressed in a full-length gown designed by Alessandro Michele, paired with a tailored black jacket, Styles looked every inch the superstar he is for this dreamy shoot on the cliffs of West Sussex in England.

While the singer and actor is far from being the fi rst man in the public eye to test gender norms, he is one of the biggest stars to do so. The decision by Vogue to photograph him in pieces we would have once seen on female stars was a bold one, and a sign that Anna Wintour was determined not to let American Vogue fall behind Edward Enninful’s British edition when it comes to testing boundaries.

Shot by Tyler Mitchell – the man who photograph­ed Beyoncé for her 2018 Vogue cover – Styles’ own distinctiv­e, largely genderless, look was central to the aesthetic of the shoot. “When you take away ‘there’s clothes for men and there’s clothes for women,’ once you remove any barriers, obviously you open up the arena in which you can play,” Styles said in the accompanyi­ng interview with fellow Brit Hamish Bowles.

Michele, the creative director of Gucci, believes we shouldn’t underestim­ate the influence of a star like Styles and his ability to shift the way an entire generation dresses. “He’s really in touch with his feminine side because it’s something natural,” he told

Vogue. “And he’s a big inspiratio­n to a younger generation – about how you can be in a totally free playground when you feel comfortabl­e. I think that he’s a revolution­ary.”

Styles has been regularly spotted in kilted skirts by Wales Bonner, chunky chain belts by JW Anderson and pussy-bow blouses by Gucci. For the shoot, Jonathan Anderson produced a trapeze coat, John Galliano at Maison Margiela made a khaki trench with a portrait neckline and Harris Reed – who also created looks for Styles’s 2020 tours – spent a week making a smoking jacket with highwaiste­d, wide-leg trousers worn with a ballet-slipper-pink tulle skirt.

Reed himself has been central to this new gender-fluid approach to men’s fashion. The 24-year- old British-American designer believes that fashion is entering a new period of exuberance and his own collection­s – as well as his own personal style – are a testament to this. His bold designs play on aesthetics reminiscen­t of both the David Bowie ’70s era as well as the flounces and embellishm­ents of the Romantic period, when men regularly out-frilled women.

“Gender-fluid clothing has become a vessel to be taken in whatever way you see fit,” Reed said in an interview with GQ.

“I might wear the same blouse I made for Harry, and I might wear it in a very feminine and sweet and innocent way. Harry’s on stage, chest fully out, sweating, rocking out. He really reclaims it for his own self.”

Since his Vogue cover, Styles has only become bolder. He released the wonderfull­y cheerful single Treat People With Kindness on the fi rst day of 2021, starring none other than Phoebe Waller-Bridge. The duo were dressed identicall­y in silver glitter jackets, white slacks, diamond-print jumpers and shirts with embellishe­d silk cuff s. The entire aesthetic felt a world away from music videos of a decade ago, when men wore sober suits and women were either half-naked or trussed up in platform heels and revealing dresses.

Then, at the most recent Grammys, Styles wore a Gucci jacket and slacks with a feather boa flung around his neck. Later on stage – dressed in head-to-toe leather – he kicked off the evening with a captivatin­g performanc­e of Watermelon Sugar. Still in Gucci, he wore a cropped jacket and flared trousers with leather boots, his signature rings and a sea-green faux feather boa. Styles proceeded to shed the boa during the chorus, revealing his tattooed chest under the jacket.

While male pop stars in the ’70s and ’80s played with gender norms, since the ’90s, men’s fashion has largely operated within strict lines of masculinit­y – and that has permeated the culture as a whole, with male self- expression limited to either tailored workwear or street style. Now, this new gender-fluid approach to dressing has given men new parameters to play with.

And while certain people in the public eye love to rail against icons like Harry Styles (note American right-wing commentato­r Candace Owens decrying the “feminisati­on of our men”) none of this should be particular­ly controvers­ial, given the fashion industry has been moving in a genderneut­ral direction for a while.

Many of the Gucci pieces Styles has worn are drawn from a unisex, rather than a womenswear, collection while JW Anderson has been pushing genderless fashion since 2013. Equally, Lewis Hamilton was shot on the cover of GQ in a skirt in 2018, and in the US Kanye West has had a similar impact on men’s fashion both through his fashion brand Yeezy and his personal style.

But mostly we should celebrate this new era for the fact it has given everyone the opportunit­y to wear clothes that say something about who they are, and not just their gender – including women, who are becoming less hemmed in by cultural norms as we move away from highly masculine or feminine dressing.

“I’ll go in shops sometimes, and I just fi nd myself looking at the women’s clothes thinking they’re amazing,” says Styles.

“It’s like anything – anytime you’re putting barriers up in your own life, you’re just limiting yourself. There’s so much joy to be had in playing with clothes. I’ve never really thought too much about what it means – it just becomes this extended part of creating something.”

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