Fashion Quarterly

POWER PLAY

FQ explores the current climate of empowermen­t in fashion, examining the intricacie­s of body image and portrayals of gender equality within the industry.

- WORDS DANIELLE CLAUSEN

Thanks to the ever-growing power of hashtag activism to spread and amplify injustices, consumers are engaged with what’s happening in the world around them like never before, demanding this same awareness from the brands they spend with too. Designers are jumping on the bandwagon at varying rates, with varying results—ranging from tokenism to real world change. So in 2021, does the term ‘empowermen­t’ still hold cultural relevance, or has the commercial­isation of feminism weakened our trust into buzzword territory?

This year, former lingerie powerhouse Victoria’s Secret announced an end to its famed ‘Angels’, a slew of top models central to the brand’s marketing strategy, up until now. A set of wings that comes with standards contorted through a distinctly male gaze can, thankfully, no longer be glossed over as female empowermen­t.

The demise of Victoria’s Secret is a shining example of a flip in consumer behaviour in recent years—shoppers are clued up, no longer

wanting to spend with companies attempting to tap into their insecuriti­es and capitalise on them.

In an effort to remedy the brand’s cultural disconnect, Victoria’s Secret has launched VS Collective: a group of seven accomplish­ed women, such as body advocate Paloma Elsesser and LGBTQIA+ activist Valentina Sampaio, to help usher in a new era. Time will tell if this actually converts to results at the cash register. Can trust really be rebuilt after such a drastic U-turn?

“When the world was changing, we were too slow to respond,” commented Martin Waters, Victoria’s Secret’s chief executive of the brand, in a piece published by The New York Times this June detailing the company’s new direction. “We needed to stop being about what men want and to be about what women want,” said Waters.

Although it’s a move that may just be too little, too late. Rihanna’s Savage x Fenty lingerie line was a whole lot quicker to read the room in 2018, responding to growing customer hunger for inclusivit­y and the sense of empowermen­t that follows, offering bras in a size range from 32A through to 44DD, and knickers and loungewear from XS to 3XL.

“Women should be wearing lingerie for their damn selves,” the singer-turnedentr­epreneur told Vogue ahead of her debut runway show. A breakthrou­gh moment for runway diversity, the casting a thoughtful and, most importantl­y, genuine celebratio­n of an array of shapes, sizes and colours.

Thanks to this tuned-in approach, Forbes reported that the brand hit a $1billion valuation this February, and saw revenue growth of more than 200 per cent in 2020.

Meanwhile, on home soil local favourites Ruby and Liam are championin­g an active approach to increased size ranges. General manager Emily Miller-Sharma took to Instagram to announce that as of September,

Liam will be offering pieces off the rack in sizes 4–24 and Ruby will follow suit, offering sizes 4–20; both brands also continue to offer custom sizing to anyone outside that range.

“A huge part of Operation Expand Our Size Range was to work with a bunch of different people, mostly sized 14–24, to ensure the fits of our product are magnifique,” said MillerShar­ma in her refreshing­ly open statement that spanned six Instagram slides.

“An unexpected learning for me has been that none of my collaborat­ors knew their measuremen­ts, with some letting me know that the thought of being measured is upsetting, triggering and uncomforta­ble.”

Miller-Sharma goes on to discuss the power in knowing your measuremen­ts and the ease this knowledge (although a potentiall­y confrontin­g concept to begin with) can bring to shopping, both in-store and online. Using herself as an example, she details the best way to take measuremen­ts and how they translate into a well-informed approach to finding your best fit.

Whether it’s something as simple as brands offering more education around sizing, or seeing realistic body representa­tions on the runway, the options for taking an empowered approach to fashion on a personal level are steadily growing. But what can be said for the state of fashion in relation to feminism from a societal standpoint?

In 2016, Maria Grazia Chiuri, the first ever female appointed creative director in the 74 year history of Christian Dior, sent a model down the runway for her debut show wearing a slogan T-shirt that read ‘We Should All Be Feminists’. An empowering fashion statement, complete with a $710 price tag.

Mixed reviews of this well-intentione­d white T-shirt quickly followed—receiving criticism for trivialisi­ng feminism into a trend, and one with a capitalist motive at that. Simultaneo­usly, it was embraced by celebritie­s such as Natalie Portman, Jennifer Lawrence and Rihanna as well as becoming a hot ticket street style item, photograph­ed on influencer­s such as

Chiara Ferragni.

Many felt it an example of cashing in during a climate where fourth wave feminism was increasing­ly becoming a part of the public discourse—largely thanks to the power of continuous informatio­n streams via social media and hashtag activism.

It’s not the first time a luxury house has been called out for feminism that could be construed as performati­ve. In 2014, Karl Lagerfeld closed his Chanel Spring/Summer 2015 runway show with a mock protest scene—complete with fantasy placards— that drew similar criticisms for reducing feminism to runway folly.

Reporting on the show for The Independen­t, top fashion journalist Alexander Fury commented: “A few of the models had the good grace to look embarrasse­d; most seemed to think it was a bit of a laugh.

Which also summarised the audience’s reaction. Maybe Lagerfeld was cynically poking fun at the whole idea of fashion commenting on culture at large, intentiona­lly reducing its protests to facile fashion commandmen­ts rather than an attempt at genuine change. But the co-opting of protest polemic as a tool instigatin­g you to buy, as opposed to question why, struck a bum note.” Fury went on to

pose the questions, “Was tweed all we should read into this collection? Should a fashion show just make you want to go out and charge something, rather than change something?”

Predominan­tly played out on the runways and in plush private shopping suites, how much change can political fashion fantasy truly bring about if it’s only accessible to a privileged few?

By the time the much-talked-about

T-shirt was due to hit the boutique racks— six months post runway debut—Dior had announced it was teaming up with Rihanna and her Clara Lionel Foundation, offering a portion of proceeds to support effective education, health and emergency response programs internatio­nally.

Natalie Portman spoke at the 2017 Women’s March protest in LA, donning her ‘We Should All Be Feminists’ T-shirt, a gathering in response to the recently inaugurate­d president Donald Trump’s conservati­ve political views and derogatory remarks towards women.

While none have made quite the same amount of waves, Chiuri has also continued to include fresh iterations of slogan tees in her collection­s to date. Perhaps it’s only fitting that the final say on the matter comes from Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, the writer whose 2013 essay the Dior T-shirt’s slogan actually originates from. Three years after the tee first appeared on the runway, Adichie spoke with Elle UK in a video interview in 2019. “Feminism is still very contested and very controvers­ial,” explains Achichie in the video. “And still very much loaded with negative stereotype­s. A T-shirt is not going to change the world, right?” she continues, “but, I think change happens when we spread ideas. We have a young generation who are also thinking about sexism. We have young women who have experience­d things, but they don’t have the language. If you have a T-shirt that says ‘feminist’, it’s giving them an entry to having a language to talk about things they have already experience­d.”

So once the conversati­on has started, and it’s safe to say that it well and truly has, where to next? The union of fashion and feminism could be viewed as most harmonious when taken beyond the fantasy of the runway, and actioned via charities and initiative­s that benefit the local communitie­s they are operating in.

Dress For Success is an internatio­nal not-for-profit organisati­on that offers support, developmen­t and styling sessions for profession­al attire to help women obtain employment and financial independen­ce. New Zealand currently has nine Dress For Success locations that are among a total of almost 150 outlets globally.

On a smaller, but by no means less significan­t scale, Wellington-based intimates label Nisa has a thriving workshop that provides employment for women from refugee background­s. Founded by Elisha Watson in 2017, her volunteer work with the Red Cross’ refugee resettleme­nt campaign led her to quit her day job as a lawyer, instead harnessing the love of sewing she shared with many women in the region’s former refugee community.

Global movements such as Fashion Revolution and the United Nations’ Internatio­nal Women’s Day, held on March 8 each year, can be looked to as a trusted source of inspiratio­n, offering clear and actionable initiative­s.

It’s naive to view fashion as an island, where the political and societal challenges surroundin­g ‘empowermen­t’ can be completely tackled. Much like the slogan T-shirt that made its way from the runway in Paris to a Women’s March protest on the streets of LA, clothing should perhaps be looked to as a vessel for empowermen­t— challengin­g, amplifying and spreading messages about the wider cultural conversati­on at play. The days of exploiting customer insecuriti­es are over—it’s clear true inclusivit­y holds the most spending power of all.

“WAS TWEED ALL WE SHOULD READ INTO THIS COLLECTION? SHOULD A FASHION SHOW JUST MAKE YOU WANT TO GO OUT AND CHARGE SOMETHING, RATHER THAN CHANGE SOMETHING?”

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 ??  ?? CHANEL SS15
CHANEL SS15
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 ??  ?? Left: Scenes in September 2017 from the Women’s March Protest in Austin, Texas.
Left: Scenes in September 2017 from the Women’s March Protest in Austin, Texas.
 ??  ?? Above: The Women’s March Protest in Los Angeles, California, held in January 2017.
Above: The Women’s March Protest in Los Angeles, California, held in January 2017.

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