Anne Trips Over Coddington's Mammy Jars As Joan Smalls Confronts Fashion Industry Racism

Grace Coddington's Mammy Jars Collection.jpg

Joan Smalls Confronts Fashion Industry Racism, As Anne Trips Into Grace's Mammy Jars

The first black person I ever saw in life was a real black woman Aunt Jemima. I remember her serving little appetizer-size pancakes in a grocery store in a tiny Minnesota town when I was growing up. I thought she was magnificent — independent and on the road, creating her own life, traveling to new places, center stage in the grocery store lighting up the place like Christmas in July.

If only I could be like her when I grew up. To me, she was a movie star — a beautiful, talented movie star — and I loved her skin, her smile and — most of all — her self-confidence.

For the Love of Mammy

For reasons I’ve never fully understood, I was committed to civil rights at a very young age — and not because we discussed the issue at the family dinner table. Only when I became a teenager and watched the agonizing brutality of civil rights protests on TV, did I understand that perhaps Aunt Jemima’s life wasn’t so totally wonderful after all.

I was shocked to discover this weekend that former Creative Director of American Vogue Grace Coddington proudly displayed her collection of mammy jars in a French lifestyle magazine last year. Frankly, I was totally disgusted with a woman I’ve admired greatly in fashion world.

You’re reading the words of someone who became so agitated at a dinner party in Connecticut 25 years ago, that I feigned a migraine just so I could excuse myself from the other guests and lie down.

Not wanting to embarrass my investment banker partner, I needed to exit stage right from the despicable dinner table conversations about people of color. He knew, of course, what was going on, and when he came to check on me in the guest room, I suggested to him that I would just return to Manhattan alone on the train and he could come Sunday morning. To his credit, he told our hosts and other guests that I had a terrible history of migraines (not true) and he wanted to take me back to New York.

aunt-jemima.jpg

After reading Anna Wintour’s apology regarding racism at Condé Nast (see article), I find it impossible to believe that none of Grace Coddington’s fashion friends suggested to her that her black mammys should be retired for good.

Grace Coddington’s home spread coincided with the infamous Prada Soho store key chain incident and accusations of blackface against Gucci.

The History of Aunt Jemima

Sarah Doneghy shares the facts of Aunt Jemima’s birth as a cultural icon in her 2018 Black Excellence essay: It Was Never About the Pancakes.

Aunt Jemima was first introduced as a minstrel show character. The characters in these shows were white people in blackface, portraying black people as “dimwitted, lazy, easily frightened, chronically idle, superstitious, happy-go-lucky buffoons,” writes Doneghy.

Her roots came from an old Billy Kersands song “Old Aunt Jemima”, a story sung by slave hands.

The lyrics tell of the promise to be set free yet remaining a slave forever. “My old missus promise me  . . .When she died she-d set me free . . . She lived so long her head got bald . . . She swore she would not die at all . . .” were some of the lyrics.

Many argue that the stage vision of Mammy — the one on Grace Coddington’s jars and pancake mix boxes — never really existed. “The Mammy pictured female household slaves as: fat, middle-aged, dark-skinned, undesirable . . . happy to serve whites, always smiling . . . The ugly truth is that they were: thin . . . young . . . light-skinned, a daughter of rape; desirable to white men and therefore raped, utterly powerless, extremely unhappy . . .” writes Doneghy.

Time To Retire the Mammy Jars, Grace. Perhaps a Public Smashing?

If true, this is one more reason for Grace Coddington to ditch her mammy jars, as they are very dark skinned and deliberately designed to appear unattractive to white men — and, therefore, not a threat to white women. That’s a whole lotta baggage around one set of jars, Grace Coddington.

Now that Vogue Global Artistic Director, Global Content Advisor and Editor-in-Chief of American Vogue Anna Wintour is determined to root out racism at Condé Nast, those jars could be the first post in a new monthly Vogue feature.

Consider a confessional column “How I Confronted My Own Quiet Racism”, with current and former Condé Nast execs leading by example. It could be on Instagram — asking other owners of racist memorabilia to share pictures of them taking out the trash. It might be a bit embarrassing, but think of all the street cred Vogue could build. Beyoncé could write a song. Vogue could be honored at the next Global Citizen festival. This could be big . . . very big.”

Condé Nast could launch this campaign the day after voters send Donald Trump packing in November. America is turning a new page and Grace’s mammy jars are step one. We work our way to the Biden Inauguration, one gesture each day. I love it!! ~ Anne

Winnie Harlow Fronts PUMA Kyron Awakening Sneakers, Talks Social Justice

Winnie Harlow Fronts PUMA Kyron Awakening Sneakers, Talks Social Justice

Jamaican Canadian top model Winnie Harlow heads out into the world as a new PUMA ambassador, wearing PUMA’s new Kyron sneakers. According to the PUMA website, the Kyron Awakening sneakers are created for pack leaders who destroy doubts and devour trends. The sneaker’s silhouette is a mashup of PUMA archive and high fashion elements.

“First to cop is the fiercest of them all,” writes PUMA, and Winnie Harlow certainly qualifies. In announcing her new role on Instagram, Harlow shared her thoughts:

I am excited to finally announce that I’m the newest @Puma global ambassador!!! Situations over the past few weeks have highlighted the injustice, inequality and police brutality faced by black people both in America and around the world so it was really important for me to partner with a brand that gives me the opportunity to champion people and organizations working to make meaningful change.

I have always been inspired by the amazing @sybrinafulton and my first act alongside @puma will be to work closely with @thetrayvonmartinfoundation where we are making a product donation for their summer STEM camp.
In times like these, it’s important to remember grassroots organizations that are working to create change at the local level and I am excited to begin this journey with my 
@puma family.
We’ve been working on several projects over the last few months, that I’m excited for you all to see in the coming weeks. 

How DC Mayor Bowser Used Graffiti to Protect Public Space

How DC Mayor Bowser Used Graffiti to Protect Public Space

When President Donald Trump sent heavily armed federal law enforcement officers and unidentified officers in riot gear into Washington, D.C. during the height of protests recently, Mayor Muriel E. Bowser responded by painting “BLACK LIVES MATTER” directly on the street leading to the White House.

While many spoke of it as a daring political act, for artists like me, it was also an act of urban intervention, an artistic act intended to transform an existing structure or institution, that reclaimed public space back for the public. And she accomplished this with little physical matter at all.

Her action – expressing dissent by marking an oppressive environment – references graffiti, which has been called the “language of the ignored.”

Art scholars note that most types of graffiti are meant to claim or reclaim territory by those who are systematically excluded. “Writers” often work quickly and at night, when they are less likely to be seen and arrested for painting on others’ property without consent.

Bowser’s action would likely be considered vandalism if not for the fact that it was carried out by the city’s Department of Public Works, using city funds. She wielded municipal services as artistic tools to condemn another state-sanctioned action, the violence perpetrated against Black people.

Ruth Akele Means Business by Fernando Gomez for Vogue Arabia June 2020

Ruth Akele Means Business by Fernando Gomez for Vogue Arabia June 2020

Nigeria-born model Ruth Akele is styled by Daniel Gonzalez Elizondo in bold colors tailoring for ‘Businesswoman’, lensed by Fernando Gomez for Vogue Arabia June 2020./ Makeup by Rosa Matilla

FENTY R6.20-DROP1 Campaign Lensed by Lea Colombo Honors Rebellious Creative Aesthetic

FENTY R6.20-DROP1 Campaign Lensed by Lea Colombo Honors Rebellious Creative Aesthetic

Rihanna’s Fenty luxury brand brightens spirits today June 11, with “Release 6-20”, the first of three separate drops across June. Lensed by London-based, South Africa born photographer Lea Colombo, the campaign’s focus is models, artists and musicians who “embody the bright spark energy of the release.”

They include Amrit, Assa Baradji, Coucou Chloe, Daniel Gonzalez, Lilan Barru, and Mao Xiaoxing./ Art direction by Jean-Baptiste Talbourdet and Lolita Jacobs; casting direction from Samuel Ellis Scheinman. Video direction by Julien Pujol and Roberto Colombo. 

“In a time where fighting for global freedoms takes center stage, this release speaks to a generation that is a different kind of creative, and a different kind of rebellious,” says Fenty’s press release. The collection honors “decades of youth aesthetics and styles that emerged during periods of steep social change, each act of the month-long release celebrates a different facet of youth, expressed through varied style cues.”

The collection is long on psychedelic, tie-dye prints, baggy rave silhouettes, grunge hoodies and asymmetric dresses. The campaign will continue into July.