Independent.co.uk
Real women: the latest fashion
       Size, age and colour are no longer a barrier to a career on the catwalk – that was the message from London Fashion Week. Fashion editor Susannah Frankel reports
                  
Saturday, 20 September 2008         
                                                                DAVID SANDISON
                                 
                    DAVID SANDISON 
                     Jourdan Dunne becomes the first black model to be cast by Prada since Naomi Campbell
 Muscular athletes in Stella McCartney's sportswear line for Adidas, Christopher Kane's blonde bombshells, models well into their thirties at Giles Deacon, a little ethnic diversity across the board ... One could be forgiven for thinking that fashion had developed a conscience, if this week's London collections were anything to go by.
                                    The reasoning behind such a move is as likely to be commercial and aesthetic    as it is ethical – fashion is famed for a ludicrously short attention span,    after all – but the fact remains that designers are increasingly hiring a    wider variety of models and it is likely that this will continue next week    in Milan and straight after in Paris. 
  Not many people working outside the fashion industry will recognise the name    Russell Marsh, but as the casting agent behind many of the world's most    high-profile advertising campaigns, glossy magazine editorials and catwalk    shows, he is extremely influential. 
  On Wednesday he told The London Fashion Week Daily, a free news sheet funded    by the British Fashion Council: "I like reality, especially in times    like these. We need a wake-up call. I think it's time people saw things for    how they are. Grow old gracefully, I say." 
  Given that, for years, Marsh has been at the forefront of a mindset decreeing    that seeking out the youngest waifs in the world to model is the last word    in high style, this seems like quite a radical about-turn. In particular,    Marsh works for Prada, whose catwalk famously launches the careers of a    fresh crop of models every season. Because of this, the more established    names (and established can mean a model who has worked for six months or, if    she's lucky, two or three years) have become almost as disposable as the    clothes they wear. But that, may be about to change. 
  "The models need to be athletic, confident, powerful," Marsh    continued, putting his money where his mouth is by casting Lara Stone – who    is positively pneumatic by fashion standards – to open Christopher Kane's    show on Tuesday. "Lara is everything you want," Marsh said. "She's    slightly bigger than the other girls and on the runway that really makes a    statement."  
  Marsh made a not entirely dissimilar "statement" when he cast    Jourdan Dunn, an 18-year-old British-born model, for Prada's previous show    six months ago: she was the first black model employed by this designer    since a young Naomi Campbell. Dunn has appeared in every heavyweight fashion    and style magazine and stars in Topshop's current advertising campaign. "I    think the look of the models is definitely changing," said Sarah Mower,    a contributing editor to the American Vogue website style.com, reporting    from London this week. "Fashion is always changing and people are just    really bored by that characterless, Caucasian look. Neither is it    demonstrable that it sells clothes any more. 
  "Because of the economic climate, designers are perhaps more aware of    their customer now than they have been: she's got money, she's over 35 and    she wants to see people like herself as opposed to women half her size and    age." 
  Mower cited the July issue of Italian Vogue, which famously featured only    black models, as having raised awareness about expressing racial diversity. "That    really moved things on," she said. "Now we have Alek Wek,    Sessillee Lopez, Jourdan Dunn. We know their names and their faces are    instantly recognisable. Fashion is a soap opera and we want to know who    these women are." 
  The halcyon days of the supermodel are gone, but she is still in demand. Linda    Evangelista is the current face of Prada and Claudia Schiffer has returned    to represent Chanel. Campbell fronts the latest Yves Saint Laurent    advertising campaign. 
  The designer Giles Deacon brought back Emma Balfour, who rose to prominence    alongside Kate Moss but has since retired, Liberty Ross, who appeared not    long after, and Christina Kruze to model in his show. Deacon said backstage: "Christina    Kruze is 39. She's the same age as me. I think those women are just as    beautiful as any eighteen-year-old." 
  Until recently, the major shows and campaigns "have featured girls who    may be no more than sixteen, who are generally white and whose career is    very short," said Cathy Edwards, the fashion director of Another    Magazine, the biannual edited and published by Jefferson Hack. "It's    not just about that any more, though. There's much more variety. There are    more black models and you only have to look at the current campaigns to see    that designers are using older models too, models who people recognise and    respond to on an emotional level. It's much easier to make a connection with    those women and that is definitely a good thing." 
  Edwards, who also styled Emma Cook's show, said good health and natural    beauty, as opposed to a younger, more waif-like aesthetic, were her    criteria. "Clothes are always going to look good on skinny people,"    she continued. "Models are like other-worldly creatures, they don't    look like the rest of us but we wanted ours to be aspirational, to look    healthy and to have a good colour. There's a big difference between a woman    who is born that way and someone who has to starve herself to fit the mould." 
  Erin O'Connor, herself successful on runways and billboards, is more aware of    this fact than most. Today she vice-chairs the British Fashion Council, is    vice-president of London Fashion Week and is founder of the Model Health    Sanctuary, a refuge for models working at London Fashion Week where they can    eat well, rest in between shows and benefit from relaxation therapy and even    counselling, should they need it. 
  "When I started out it was very different," O'Connor said. "We    had a longer period of time to cultivate our careers and enjoy the moment.    Fashion is all about a search for newness and often today new means young."    She agreed, however, that the difference this week was remarkable. "You    can actually see the girls gaining confidence, literally finding their feet."    She also attributes the changing environment to the model-of-the-moment,    Agyness Deyn, who with her peroxide blonde crop, determinedly individual    wardrobe and idiosyncratic good looks leads the new individuality. "I    think Agyness represents something really healthy," O'Connor argued. "Because    her look and personality is so strong, the designers work with her, it is a    collaborative process, she has a certain amount of power." 
  She concluded: "Over the past year the look of the catwalk has been    overwhelmingly positive, but we have to keep going with this. It would be    wrong to say that all the problems have been solved because I've seen how    young and vulnerable some of the models still are. It's going to be a    constant challenge ... and it is up to all of us in the industry to take    responsibility for that."