The predominantly and shockingly white Valentino runway
Number of black models at Chanel? Zilch. There was around 60 look sent onto the runway and not the ladies modelling these were black.
Elie Saab? Yep zero again.
Valentino? Just the one.
Givenchy? Only 2 out of the 10.
Jean Paul Gaultier had the most out of these brands but still the black models were a minority on the runway.
This makes me so angry. But then I got thinking about black models off the runway and in other aspects of the fashion world.
You can count the number of black women who have made it onto the cover of US Vogue on one hand.
There was Oprah Winfrey in 1998, Halle Berry in 2002, Jennifer Hudson in 2007 and Michelle Obama and finally Beyoncé in 2009. This fact is even more shocking when you bear in mind that the magazines first issue was published in 1892. So that makes 118 years of US Vogue and only 5 African-American women on the cover. Astounding.
But then Vogue has been a cause for controversy of race many times. There was the outrage at the Carine Roitfeld's Steven Klein shoot for French Vogue which featured the shocking image of a pale skinned Lara Stone painted black (see below)
Don’t forget Naomi Campbell, arguably the most famous black supermodel and Chanel Iman, one of my favourite ever models who appeared on the front cover of the ‘Black Beauties’ issue of Korean Vogue.
However these are very small steps and they appear few and far between.
Black models are simply not represented fairly on the runways and in magazines and something needs to be done about this.
Anna Wintour if you are reading this, please make my dream where I can count the number of balck models on the front of US Vogue on more than 1 hand come true. It's not hard.