8 113
Fashion Jobs
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
Director, Retailer Platform Lead, Canada Affiliate
CDI · TORONTO
ESTÉE LAUDER COMPANIES
E-Commerce Manager - Toronto, Canada (Hybrid)
CDI · TORONTO
AVEDA
Keyholder - Aveda - 35 Hrs - Aveda Royal Park - West Vancouver, bc
CDI · WEST VANCOUVER
AVEDA
Keyholder - 24 Hrs - Aveda - Royal Park - West Vancouver, bc
CDI · WEST VANCOUVER
SEPHORA CANADA
Chef Déquipe Services Beauté
CDI · MOUNT ROYAL
SEPHORA CANADA
Loss Prevention
CDI · WINNIPEG
SEPHORA CANADA
Chef d'Équipe Exploitation Des Magasins
CDI · MONTREAL
SEPHORA CANADA
Loss Prevention
CDI · BURLINGTON
SEPHORA CANADA
Manager, Client Experience
CDI · TORONTO
TIFFANY & CO
Loss Prevention Supervisor - Full Time Ottawa Rideau
CDI · OTTAWA
LORO PIANA
Loro Piana, Operations Specialist - Toronto
CDI · TORONTO
LORO PIANA
Loro Piana, Operations Specialist - Yorkdale
CDI · TORONTO
SEPHORA CANADA
Operations Consultant
CDI · MONCTON
SEPHORA CANADA
Manager, Talent & Operations
CDI · TORONTO
TIFFANY & CO
Loss Prevention Professional, Full-Time, Montreal Ritz
CDI · MONTREAL
TIFFANY & CO
Loss Prevention Professional, Full-Time, Montreal Ogilvy
CDI · MONTREAL
SEPHORA CANADA
Consultant Exploitation Des Magasins
CDI · MONTREAL
SEPHORA CANADA
Chef d'Équipe Expérience en Scène
CDI · MONTREAL
SEPHORA CANADA
Loss Prevention
CDI · KITCHENER
SEPHORA CANADA
Loss Prevention
CDI · OTTAWA
SEPHORA CANADA
Manager, Client Services
CDI · AJAX
TIFFANY & CO
Loss Prevention Professional, Full-Time, Square One
CDI · TORONTO
By
AFP
Published
Feb 20, 2020
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

Fashion Institute of Technology apologizes for 'racist' runway show

By
AFP
Published
Feb 20, 2020

A prestigious New York fashion college apologized on Wednesday after a catwalk featuring models wearing large prosthetic red lips, ears and bushy eyebrows was branded racist.


The show made headlines after African-American model Amy Lefevre, 25, told the New York Post tabloid that she had refused to wear the props because they were "clearly racist." - FIT


The president of the Fashion Institute of Technology said it was investigating the use of the accessories in the February 7 show, which was part of New York Fashion Week.

Joyce Brown said it had not been the creator's intent to make a statement about race but "it is now glaringly obvious that has been the outcome.

"For that, we apologize -- to those who participated in the show, to students, and to anybody who has been offended by what they saw," she said in a statement emailed to AFP.

The show made headlines after African-American model Amy Lefevre, 25, told the New York Post tabloid that she had refused to wear the props because they were "clearly racist."

In a statement posted on Instagram, Jonathan Kyle Farmer, chairman of the fashion design program which ran the show, apologized directly to Lefevre.

The controversy comes after Italian fashion house Prada said earlier this month it would take steps to fight racism and promote diversity following uproar over its sale of monkey-like key chain figurines.

Prada was forced to apologize in December 2018 after it featured so-called "Pradamalia" objects that had exaggerated red lips and evoked blackface caricatures in its New York store.

Critics said the merchandise -- which was pulled from shelves following the outcry -- resembled Sambo, a racist caricature that reinforced negative stereotypes about America's black community.

The problematic custom of blackface dates back to about 1830, and so-called "minstrel shows," when white performers caked their faces in greasepaint or shoe polish and drew on exaggerated lips.

Copyright © 2024 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed in this section (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the contents of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presses.