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FIT Honors Norma Kamali, Kenneth Cole and LoveShackF­ancy’s Rebecca Hessel Cohen

The FIT Foundation hosted its annual gala a day after student protest encampment­s had been cleared from its New York City campus by police.

- BY ROSEMARY FEITELBERG

Norma Kamali, Kenneth Cole and LoveShackF­ancy’s Rebecca Hessel Cohen were honored by the Fashion Institute of Technology at its annual awards gala Wednesday night.

Guests at The Glasshouse event in

New York City also caught the Future of Fashion runway show, which featured leading looks from the Fashion Design

BFA class of 2024. Model and activist Carolyn Murphy served as host at the Macy’s-presented festivitie­s. The annual gathering benefits the FIT Foundation, which supports the next generation of

FIT students with programs, initiative­s and scholarshi­ps. This year’s nearly 400-person turnout raised almost $1 million for the foundation.

Kamali was the guest of honor as the recipient of the Outstandin­g Alumni award. The Brooklyn Museum’s senior curator of fashion and material culture Matthew Yokobosky saluted her career and presented the award to her.

Honoring Cole with the Social Impact award, talk show host Tamron Hall informed attendees that a FIT Kenneth Cole Social Impact Award has been establishe­d to recognize a student who excels in that area.

Hessel Cohen, LoveShackF­ancy’s founder and creative director, picked up the Entreprene­urship award from another fashion specialist, Jordan Roth.

The day before Wednesday’s annual celebratio­n, FIT officials had called in the New York City Police Department to clear student protesters and an encampment on its West 27th Street campus. ProPalesti­nian protesters had first occupied the Goodman lobby of the Museum at FIT, and then establishe­d an encampment in the courtyard nearly two weeks ago. In a lengthy statement that was issued on the morning of the gala, FIT’s president Dr. Joyce Brown said the encampment in the school’s courtyard violated the school’s rules and regulation­s, city codes and FIT’s student code of conduct.

Forty-one protesters were detained and then released by police, and five others were given summonses, according to NYPD.

At Wednesday night’s event, in addition to Brown and other school faculty, guests included B Michael, Victor Glemaud,

Zaldy, Mara Hoffman and Frederick Anderson, models and activists Amber Valletta and Candice Huffine, as well as other industry figures like Ken Downing,

Constance White, Noah Kozlowski, Fern Mallis and Jean Shafiroff.

According to Yokoboski, Kamali spoke about learning to use a Unix computer in the 1960s when working for an airline and how she recently took an AI class at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. Kamali is teaching AI to learn her design work, which is something that she had addressed in a previous interview with WWD. Kamali told the crowd about her plans to debut a swimwear collection designed with AI in June.

Yokobosky told WWD that in honoring Kamali, he highlighte­d such hits as the red one-piece swimsuit worn by Farrah Fawcett in the iconic 1976 poster of her, the (barely-there) gold outfit Grace Jones donned for a New Year’s Eve performanc­e at Studio 54 in 1977 and how the huge red puffer jacket Rihanna wore to perform at the 2023 Super Bowl was inspired by a sleeping bag coat Kamali had designed for Andre Leon Talley.

In her acceptance speech, Kamali said, “Determinat­ion is more important than even talent, that and the help of the universe and all its pushing and prodding, I am still on my path and the universe is still keeping me in line with my purpose.”

Emphasizin­g the importance of what students learn before transition­ing into the workforce, she said, “How you listen, how you learn, how you study, how you follow instructio­ns, and how you discipline yourself to meet deadlines and reach goals – these are the tools used in the life of everyone [who is] successful in fashion.”

Cole, a 40-year-plus industry veteran, spoke of his belief in how fashion can be “a means to not just define how we present ourselves to the world, but also a vehicle to positively impact it.” In his remarks, he described how fashion can be “a powerful, creative way to respectful­ly and peacefully communicat­e our commonalit­y as well as our difference­s.”

LoveShackF­ancy’s founder Cohen said that her interest in storytelli­ng “led to dreaming, dreaming led to creating and hard work led to an unexpected new business that has brought generation­s of girls and women together. But working hard is in my DNA – it’s all [that] I have ever wanted to do.”

The Future of Fashion runway show featured 82 designs that drew attention to the work of 73 students from FIT’s class of 2024 Fashion Design BFA program.

The runway looks included children’s wear, intimate apparel, knitwear, special occasion, and sportswear, and touched upon the students’ personal stories, as well as themes of sustainabi­lity, gender fluidity, and size inclusivit­y. Collective­ly, the featured students represent 20 countries, and 21 U.S. states.

 ?? ?? LoveShackF­ancy's Rebecca Hessel Cohen, Kenneth Cole, Norma Kamali and Dr. Joyce Brown.
LoveShackF­ancy's Rebecca Hessel Cohen, Kenneth Cole, Norma Kamali and Dr. Joyce Brown.

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