Skip to main content

CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund Winner Kerby-Jean Raymond is the Most Important Designer in the World Right Now

Of all the Fall 2018 runway shows I attended at New York Fashion Week, the only show that felt truly necessary was Pyer Moss.

As I took my seat at Spring Studios, a live gospel choir dressed all in white began to sing a medley including “Nobody Knows All the Trouble I’ve Seen,” and my blood turned to chill as the song shifted, and the line, “Too many n****s on Rikers Island, why must it be,” rang out. I hadn’t expected to come to a fashion show expecting to have the racial disparities in incarceration statistics highlighted, but Pyer Moss’ choice to present a political message against the glitzy backdrop of a fashion show amounted to sheer brilliance. The choir, alongside the casting, which featured only POC models, presented such a triumphant message of Black pride that I was verklempt to see a show that didn’t pay lip service to diversity but embodied it in every aspect of the show.

Pyer Moss stood in opposition to that patent whiteness that tends to envelop fashion week – there was a visible difference in who attended the Pyer Moss show vs who attended other shows – and the show felt like a historic moment; a communion between the audience members, who all rose to give the brand a standing ovation at the show’s end.

Last night, Pyer Moss, an independent label founded in 2013 by the 31-year-old Black designer Kerby-Jean Raymond won the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund award, a prize of $400,000. Previous winners include The Row, Proenza Schouler, and Alexander Wang; a rarefied group of designers who tend to achieve massive success post-win. This year’s runners-up were Bode, a menswear brand that repurposes antique quilts into boxy jackets and Jonathan Cohen, who designs playful, colourful womenswear, who each win $150,000.

Pyer Moss’ work focuses not only on dramatic silhouettes and artistic flourishes; it highlights racism, police brutality, incarceration and other issues faces disproportionately by marginalized communities. Raymond is doing work that no one else in the fashion industry can claim to be doing; producing amazing clothes that actually mean something. He’s a true vanguard and the most deserving player to win this award.

In an interview with the New York Times earlier this year, Raymond said, “I don’t want to sound narcissistic at all, but I do believe that I am one of the thought leaders that have emerged in the past five years. Every industry had a person that led the march to modernizing the understanding of what black life is: In music, it was Solange. In television, it was “Insecure.” In sports, it was Colin Kaepernick and Serena Williams. And in fashion, I don’t think there is another me.”

He’s right. And we’re lucky to have him.

The post CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund Winner Kerby-Jean Raymond is the Most Important Designer in the World Right Now appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/2D48voO

Popular posts from this blog

I Tried the Viral One-Leg Jeans, and I Got Plenty of Stares

If you're into fashion and an avid TikTok scroller, you've probably come across the viral and somewhat controversial Coperni one-leg jeans . People who got their hands on them are asking followers how they should style them - and even whether or not they should keep them. Those who are still on a waitlist or are simply curious about the trend are going so far as to DIY the jeans by taking a scissor to one leg of an old pair. I, on the other hand, dared to step into the Romeo Hunte Black One Leg Pant ($232, originally $725), an alternative take on the same silhouette that's even more eye-catching (which, how is that possible?). These jeans were, without a doubt, one of the most polarizing looks I've ever worn - and I've tried some pretty divisive clothing, from Skims butt-enhancing shapewear to the brand's famous push-up nipple bra , and many a sheer naked dress . After wearing the jeans around town to run errands and obviously attracting some attention (st...

Oh, to Be Pedro Pascal's Sparkly Cardigan

Never have we been more envious of an inanimate object than when Pedro Pascal stepped out in a sparkly cardigan this week. As soon as we saw him walking the streets of London wearing the glittery knit, we longed to swap places with it - to be enrobing the heartthrob, catching the attention of random passersby, sparking internet discourse, and ultimately taking responsibility for his style breakout. Pascal has been serving look after look while promoting " The Last of Us " season one and "The Mandalorian" season three this year, working with stylists Julie Ragolia and Fabio Immediato . His latest came on Feb. 23 when he arrived to a radio interview wearing the shiny cardigan in question: a long button-down sweater made of silver foil yarn and created by menswear label 4SDesigns. He layered it over a sheer brown tank top and finished the look with black pants, leather boots, and his usual chunky-framed glasses. Just one day prior, the actor stopped by a photo call...