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Posted: 2024-03-13T15:47:06Z | Updated: 2024-03-13T15:47:06Z The Godmother Of Fashion Is Not Done Fighting For Representation | HuffPost

The Godmother Of Fashion Is Not Done Fighting For Representation

Bethann Hardison moved mountains as a pioneering Black model, agent and activist. But her work is far from done.
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A former fashion model herself, Bethann Hardison (center) became an industry mainstay for her work with young talent.
Phelan Marc Media / LWD

In her 2023 documentary, Invisible Beauty,  Bethann Hardison recognizes living history by being the embodiment of it. She knows the firsts and the lasts. She knows the models, the campaigns and the covers. She knows the designers and the movements that have made the fashion industry what it is today because she was part of so much of it.

But memory is fleeting as historic firsts get lost in time. Every new generation reimagines the past differently. In an interview with HuffPost, Hardison pointed out how some young people will ask her about the paucity of Black models, believing that they are few and far between, not realizing that there have always been Black people at fashions forefront.

[They are] not looking or not aware and ask, Do you think theres ever going to be Black models doing this? and dont realize that it already happened, she said, when I spoke to her at 2024s Leading Women Defined conference  in Dana Point, California. They get misconstrued and say the wrong thing thats not accurate. Theres this misconception that at one point there used to be no Black designers, but there were. Theyll say that Ralph Lauren never had any Black models before Tyson Beckford came along, but there were.

That confusion is rooted in a truth. Fashion can be unfair. Fashion is not for the faint of heart. Its a very difficult business, Hardison told me. Its always been tough. Always been tight. Its always had designers of color in it. It comes and goes in waves in who can really stand the test of time and be noticed.

Hardison was more than noticed at Leading Women Defined, an exclusive and highly curated leadership event for women of color that was founded by former BET chief executive Debra L. Lee . This was Hardisons fifth appearance at the summit, which was held for the 15th time Feb. 29 through March 4.

At the conference, participants watched Invisible Beauty during an after-hours pajama party at the Ritz-Carlton Laguna Niguel. While noshing on Garretts Chicago mix popcorn and sipping cocktails, we saw supermodels like Beckford, Naomi Campbell and Iman grace the documentary that chronicled Hardisons lifes work to mentor young talent and champion diversity in fashion.

A former model herself, Hardison became an industry mainstay for her work with young talent, particularly models of all backgrounds, whom she represented and mentored as an agent. Over time, she found herself in opposition with white fashion houses that treated diversity as a trend at best and invisible at the least. At first, she wanted the documentary to be more of an expos. Hardison wanted to hear the designers actually say what most already knew they didnt want to book Black talent because, in their minds, it didnt fit their brand.

Models [of color] had disappeared. Models that worked for six, seven years went dormant for five years, she said. At some point [while working on the documentary], I realized I wasnt going to get white designers to say, I dont book Black girls.

The documentarys focus then pivoted to her career and her work in diversity. Initially reluctant to have the spotlight on her, Hardison soon began to see what everyone else saw in her, with the film coming together as a living history and tribute to diversity in fashion and Hardisons role in supporting that.

Today, Hardison believes that one of the biggest issues for designers of color is just how difficult it is to stay afloat. They dont have the finances to do it, she said. And that is evidenced in how many heralded but fledging Black designers whose names were bandied about only a few years ago  are now struggling to produce lines and selling clothes at steep discounts , or havent updated their websites in months or longer.

The only place where you can improve anything is when people get sponsorship to provide finances for designers to have businesses, Hardison added. Its not necessarily a Black thing, but thats who feels it more because they dont have the income.

Leading Women Defined, by showcasing Hardison, as well as hosting an on-site marketplace featuring Black designers, sought to help those often overlooked by not only getting them the recognition they deserve, but the dollars. Participants in the conference visited the boutique daily, dropping thousands on vendors like Fe Noel and Soul Gems by Maria .

According to Hardison, navigating the business side is the true final frontier for Black Americans in fashion. I dont know if theres another mountain to climb other than can we get business people to teach brands of color how to do business and do it well, she said.

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