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- JA Fashion Week
- BET: Fashion Blackout Encore Tonight and Sunday
- French Vogue July 2008
- Gianfranco Ferre Shows Some Skin
- NYT: Tyra Banksable
- Hey Look! A Black Girl on TV! - 80s Edition
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- Right when Stephanie's feet spoke to her
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- Line for Indiana Jones - 45 min early!
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- The Leighra Band LUVed Jeni's Ice Cream
- Noemie Lenoir - French Vogue July 2008
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- Leighra at Alexandra Stylist's Fabulous Apartment
- Style Star: Zoe Kravitz
- Alek Wek on Surface Magazine #72
- Smoky Eyes Makeup Directions: A How To from a Seph...
- Muslin of Wedding Dress - Just a Draft
- Iman Doesn't Want Black Models to be Caricatures
- Laser Hair Removal Review: Appointment #11 The Dou...
- Indiana Jones Deemed a Knockout!! David's scenes a...
- How to Curl Your Hair with a Flat Iron - Yes, Curl
- "From Here to Timbuktu"
- Wedding Update #547
- Dinah, my starving kitty who lives on the 'fridge
- Anatomy of a Cover: Essence Magazine
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- Costume Institute Gala 2008
- My Introduction to Julia Cameron at Barnes and Noble
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- Rogan for Target
- Cake Tasting Galore at Sticky Fingers!
- Riahanna Covers Elle Magazine 6/2008
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- Schitzo Thursdays, and other afternoons
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May
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"From Here to Timbuktu"
I think I've touched on why fashion shoots in "exotic" (read non-Western) locals tend to get under my skin. The main issue for me is the tendency for the photographer to use whatever local is handy as a prop and/or or exploit the model's own ethnicity if she happens to be non-White. I've lost count of how many times I've seen British/Jamaican Naomi Campbell dressed as an African villager on the pages of Elle and Vogue.
This kind of shoot is always lazy and sometimes just plain offensive to me but it is a fashion industry staple, just like pictures of models jumping in expensive clothes in American Vogue.
But would the images be as potentially offensive if instead of a white model, a black one was used? Turns out the answer is "sorta" thanks to Vogue's "From Here to Timbuktu" shoot photographed by Mikael Jansson for their June 2008 issue.
Here are the good things. The photographs are beautiful as is the African* model, Liya Kebede. Okay so she's not from Mali but they get points for not trying to dress her in traditional garments right? Unlike many of the models usually used in these themed spreads, Kebede looks genuinely happy to be in Timbuktu in these vibrant photographs that could conceivable come from someone's own scrapbook if the person in question was extremely fabulous. There is only one photo of the model in a actual safari jacket (this one priced at $385 by DVF if you are interested.) No spread like this is complete without a safari jacket, is it?
What really got my attention with this pictorial was the travel diary, written by Sally Singer, which accompanied it. Singer, who describes Timbuktu as a "sandbox at the end of the Earth" that feels to her like the "most priviledged of all playgrounds." Her tone does in words what wasn't quite captured in the photographs, that this country exists solely for the amusement of Westerners that can afford to travel there, it is a playground full of interesting children who are just dying to take one's perfectly manicured hand and show you around the place. One major difference is that thanks to designers like Oscar de la Renta who has "expertly crafted" mudcloth into his Spring '08 collection, everyone wearing the traditional textile in Mali looks like they've "stepped off the Dries Van Noten catwalk." She even takes calling her local guide Oscar as an homage to the designerr because of the tabard mudcloth garment he is wearing. There's no mention of what his real name is.
I must say that I agree with her , it is a relief to take pictures of locals and not have their outfits clash with yours. For example, my husband and I were in Paris last month and I had to spend countless hours on Photoshop editing out all those unsightly natives wearing last season's Agnes B. Quel horreur!
photo source: Faith Akiyama/TFS
*I say African here rather than Ethiopian here intentionally. Even though Liya's East African features stand out in the crowds of Malians surrounding her, in Vogue's view one black person (or African person) is just the same as another.