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Parsons Benefit to Honor Thom Browne, Bethann Hardison and Libby Wadle

The annual gala will salute the three leaders in the fashion industry, who work in multiple capacities.

- BY ROSEMARY FEITELBERG

With the commenceme­nt gowns and university gala season nearing, The New School is gearing up to honor three pivotal figures in the fashion industry at its annual Parsons Benefit in New York City.

Designer Thom Browne, advocate and luxury brand consultant Bethann Hardison and the J.Crew Group's chief executive officer Libby Wadle will be the guests of honor at this year's event on May 21 at Cipriani Wall Street in New York. Just as Parsons specialize­s in interdisci­plinary design and collaborat­ion, this year's honorees excel across different platforms. Each one is also being recognized for contributi­ng to design, retail, fashion, philanthro­py and social justice.

Browne is not just founder and chief creative officer of his namesake company that he started in 2003. In January

2023, he also took on the lead role at the Council of Fashion Designers of America as its chairman. The New Yorkbased creative's two-year term is said to have started on a strong note including enhancing inclusivit­y.

Having worked in the fashion industry in multiple capacities such as modeling (including a Gap campaign last year), starting a modeling and management agency, a stalwart advocate of diversity in fashion, Hardison also champions emerging designers of color. With the CFDA's support, Hardison started The Designers Hub to guide and empower Black designers. If all of this sounds like the making of a movie, well, it is. Last year Hardison codirected a documentar­y about her life, “Invisible Beauty,” with Frédéric Tcheng, whose portfolio includes “Halston” and “Dior and I.”

Meanwhile, Wadle, a Boston College graduate, has led the J.Crew Group since the fall of 2020, overseeing its J.Crew, J.Crew Factory and Madewell divisions. With 25 years of experience in the retail sector, she also serves on the company's board of directors.

Browne, a three-time CFDA winner, has been in the spotlight more than ever as of late. Earlier this month, he debuted sheets and blankets by Frette with a performanc­e on Milan's Via Gesù. Called “Time to Sleep,” it was held at Palazzina Appiani, a neoclassic­al building designed in 1805 within the Parco Sempione, which was the official gallery for the family of Napoleon Bonaparte, and near the

Civic Arena, modeled after the antique Roman stadium. Last month, Browne touched down in Los Angeles for his first major event there in nearly 20 years — a celebratio­n of his women's collaborat­ion with Saks Beverly Hills that includes an exclusive capsule of young, wearable tweedy sportswear pieces like pleated miniskirts, shrunken varsity jackets and summery slingbacks. Last fall, the Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts honored him and Andrew Bolton, curator in charge at the Metropolit­an Museum of

Art's Costume Institute, for the exemplary preservati­on that was given to their Georgian town house renovation.

Attendees at next month's Parsons Benefit will be welcomed by the evening's emcee Nicole Ari Parker. Like the honorees, she is a multihyphe­nate, working as an actor, producer and the creator of Gymwrap, a fitness sweatband developed with EvapoCool. Parsons is expecting between 400 and 500 guests at this year's extravagan­za. They will also see some of the students' talents up close — through a fashion show by the BFA Fashion Design students and work will also be displayed by MFA Fashion Design students.

To keep the celebrator­y spirit high and to amplify other creative aspects of the school's community, there will be performanc­es by The New School Gospel Choir and Artlex String Quartet, which hails from The New School's College of Performing Arts.

Revealing this year's honorees, Yvonne Watson, interim executive dean of The New School's Parsons School of Design, highlighte­d how Parsons “was founded upon the idea that great design can positively change the world.” Watson said the honorees' impact has “helped reshape the creative and commercial landscape in subtle and profound ways that have helped inspire a new generation of design thinkers and leaders.”

The Parsons Benefit raises funds for scholarshi­ps for students interested in art, design, liberal arts, music, technology and social innovation.

 ?? ?? Bethann Hardison and Thom Browne
Bethann Hardison and Thom Browne

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