Selfridges' window featuring Sue Kreitzman |
What better way to entertain oneself on a grey, cold, drizzly late afternoon than to fight one's way along Oxford Street, dodging the tourist-tat stalls, kamikaze cycles and nose-to-tail buses spewing out the worst diesel pollution in the world (it's official) in order to stand and gawp at a group of old people behaving outrageously.
Outrageous, because they're refusing to conform to the stereotypes and are showing off in public - in the windows of Selfridges no less.
Molly Parkin's window |
Each January, Selfridges' Bright Young Things has celebrated the rising stars from fashion, art, design and food. This year it decided - OMG! as the young media people may well have said - to celebrate instead 14 inspiring Bright Old Things, who've "embraced a new vocation later in life". There's an architect turned topiarist, an actress who now designs furniture, a vlogger, and a "punk hero".
Sue Kreitzman's window |
Here too is the former journalist, fashion editor and erotic novelist and now painter Molly Parkin, 83, once a wild young woman and now a wild old woman, known for her bohemian outfits and exotic turbans. Plus one of my favourite bright old things, the artist Sue Kreitzman who, according to the jewellery designer Tatty Devine, is leader of the anti-beige brigade. Sue was one of the six wonderful older women, average age 80, featured in the Channel 4 documentary Fabulous Fashionistas and the founder of a group of like-minded artists, WOW! Wild Old women: "We are loud, we are raucous and we are thrillingly, vividly visible. We are Outside Artists so we do exactly as we please." A fellow member is Lauren Shanley, who makes many of Sue's gorgeously overblown, bright and beautiful coats of many colours.
Zandra Rhodes at the Design Museum's Women Fashion Power |
Make no mistake, these are powerful women. The current show at the Design Museum, Women Fashion Power: Not a multiple choice (until April 26) celebrates several more. Here is the doyenne of individual style, Zandra Rhodes - still with bright pink hair at the age of 74.
Camila Batmanghelidjh flares brightly among the little black power outfits |
And among the little black dresses and power suits, here is Camila Batmanghelidjh, founder of the charity Kids Company, who describes on the label how her outfit, a glorious tangle of patterned fabrics and colour, including small, raw-edges patches sewn on by just a few stitches, was made. "Anything goes if it makes you happy. The kids gave us the scraps of fabrics and scarves as well as the brooch. We normally put everything on the floor and collage it." (She and Kirsty Wark, also featured, discuss how to dress with authority in The Independent.)
Scraps of fabric donated by her "kids" hang by a thread |
These are women who refuse to disappear as they get older, who not only wear purple but fuchsia, emerald, scarlet, cerise, kingfisher, yellow and sky blue. With sequins and beads. Do a Google image search on their names as an instant antidote to the February blues and greys.
What are we to make of Selfridges' and Channel 4's sudden interest in the creative older woman, and of Advanced Style, the photographic blog of older people's street fashion from which I suspect this trend has originated? Is it merely a passing tokenism? I don't know, but - like the old joke, "What do you call 10,000 lawyers at the bottom of the sea?" - it's a good start.
P.S. I have just realised what has been niggling at me for 48 hours about Camila Batmanghelidjh's exhibit: She is a large woman, and that is part of her power. Her flamboyant outfits say in part: "I'm big and proud and I still want to be looked at." So why was her dress on a standard size model? (It was the same with Sue Kreitzman's mannequin in Selfridges' window.) Are fat wild old women a taboo too far?
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