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by NPR STAFF
If you pay attention to the Emmys and Academy Awards, then you’ve probably seen those glamorous, haute couture gowns made by Kevan Hall. He’s known for dressing A-listers like Vanessa Williams, Salma Hayek, Celine Dion — even first lady Michelle Obama.
His work has earned him multiple awards. After studying fashion design at Cass Technical High School in Detroit, he won a scholarship sponsored by the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising. After graduating, he won the Peacock Award for Outstanding Fashion Design. In 1989, the NAACP named him the Great American Designer, and in 2005, Life & Style Magazine named him Stylemaker of the Year.
Among the handful of top African-American designers in the country, Hall centers his work in Los Angeles. He’ll be showing off his 2012 bridal and ready-to-wear collections Friday at the Washington Club in the nation’s capital.
More here.
Featured Stories
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Emancipation Park: Renovation comes with reservations
Posted on October 4, 2011 | No CommentsThe City of Houston will soon launch a capital campaign calling on Houstonians to help fund an $18 million makeover of Emancipation Park.
The effort has been heralded as an attempt to position the park as a monument to the city’s African-American history, and as ground reclaimed for families, cultural events and Third Ward redevelopment. The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department recently awarded $1 million to the city’s Parks and Recreation Department to renovate and expand the park, adding to the forward movement of the project. Read more: http://www.defendernetwork.com/emancipation-park-renovation-comes-with-reservations/
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Moody-Nolan Opens New Office in Dallas to Expand its Business and to Gain New Projects Further West
Posted on October 4, 2011 | No CommentsMoody-Nolan, the nation’s largest African-American owned and operated architecture firm, has opened a new office in Dallas. With its headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, Moody-Nolan sees its new presence in Dallas as a hub for conducting business across the State of Texas.
“We see more project opportunities in Texas that parallel Moody-Nolan’s strengths and skills for architecture and design,” saidCurt Moody, president and chief executive officer of Moody-Nolan. The firm has a deep portfolio of completed designs that crisscross the nation, including educational, healthcare, fitness and recreation, as well as cultural architectural projects. Read more here:
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ARE YOU WHAT YOU WEAR? The Politics of Fashion
Posted on October 4, 2011 | No CommentsKathy Peiss
Zoot Suit: The Enigmatic Career of an Extreme Style
(University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011)Fashion is our second skin. Our fleshly persona can be hidden or displayed, repressed or exaggerated by the costumes we wear. Dress can be magical. The harassed secretary by day can become the glamorous starlet during the evening; a company’s uptight executive can become a Don Juan at night. All it takes is a change of clothes, of appearance and mindset. Fashion dresses – and creates—many sins.
Sometimes fashion becomes more than a mere decorative trapping, crossing the line from a personal style to a social, if not political, statement. In the decade spanning the mid-1930s to mid-’40s, a new male fashion emerged and gained popularity thoughout the country. It also provoked much controversy. It was the new style of the youthful sharpie, the jitterbuger, the zoot suiter.
Read more at http://www.brooklynrail.org/2011/10/express/are-you-what-you-wear-the-politics-of-fashion
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Architect Zaha Hadid wins second consecutive Stirling Prize
Posted on October 4, 2011 | No CommentsZaha Hadid is arguably the most famous active female architect in the world today. And while she’s been called a diva, she’s certainly one of the most prolific and, having won the Royal Institute of British Architects’ (RIBA) Stirling Prize for the second year in a row, one of the more decorated working architects.
Over the weekend, Hadid’s Evelyn Grace Academy, the heavily glazed and angular home of a secondary school in South London, claimed the Stirling (and $31,000 purse) from a competitive short list that included the 2012 Olympic Velodrome and a re-imagined Royal Shakespeare Theatre. More here: http://www.smartplanet.com/blog/design-architecture/architect-zaha-hadid-wins-second-consecutive-stirling-prize/915
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“Design with the Other 90%: Cities” at the United Nations
Posted on October 3, 2011 | No Comments“Design with the Other 90%: Cities,” the second in a series of themed exhibitions by Cooper-Hewitt that demonstrate how design can address the world’s most critical issues, opens Oct. 15 at the United Nations and runs through Jan. 9, 2012. Organized by Cynthia E. Smith, the museum’s curator of socially responsible design, the exhibition will feature more than 60 projects from 22 countries around the globe.
The exhibition will explore design solutions to the challenges created by rapid urban growth in informal settlements, commonly referred to as slums. Close to 1 billion people live in informal settlements, and that population is projected to swell to 2 billion people by 2030. This accelerated urban expansion will take place primarily in developing and emerging economies in an increasingly climate-challenged world. Projects and products at every scale will be included, with a focus on designs that are informed by end users: alternative housing design, methods and materials; low-cost clean water; accessible education initiatives; sanitation and solid-waste management; transportation solutions; innovative systems and infrastructure; and urban design and planning. “Cooper-Hewitt is delighted to present this free exhibition at the United Nations, where visitors from all over the world will be able to see how design can address the most critical issues in developing and emerging countries,” said Bill Moggridge, director of the museum.
More details: http://cooperhewitt.org/exhibitions/other-90
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UN launches competition to design memorial to victims of slavery
Posted on October 3, 2011 | No CommentsOn September 30, the committee tasked with building a permanent memorial at the United Nations to honor the victims of slavery and the transatlantic slave trade today launched a global competition for the design of the structure to remind the world that millions of Africans were violently removed from their homelands, abused and robbed of their dignity.
The UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) will administer the design competition, Ambassador Raymond Wolfe of Jamaica, the chair of the Permanent Memorial Committee on Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade, told a news conference at UN Headquarters. More details can be found at
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=39899&Cr=slave&Cr1=
Latest Headlines
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Graphic/Media Design
A tribute to Sylvia Harris
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Fashion Design
March 16: Naana B., designer of Vixen Handbags
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Fashion Design
March 15: Nkwo Onwuka, fashion designer
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Fashion Design
March 14: Joyce Chimanye: talented Zimbabwean fashion designer
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Fashion Design
March 13: Fashion Designer Aisha Obuobi of Christie Brown
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Fashion Design
March 12: Kendra Francis of FRANKE
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March 11: Towana Phillip, designer of To’Sha Knits as Emerging Handbag designer
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Fashion Design
March 10: Tennille McMillan of Nakimuli, for Funky Fashion Dresses
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Fashion Design
March 9: Korto Momolu for being a Triple threat – fashion, jewelry and bags
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Graphic/Media Design
March 8: Amanda George for creating the innovative blog, The Audacity of Color
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Fashion Design
March 7: Candra Palmer of Artyce Footwear, Shoe Designer for custom, special occasion footwear
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Fashion Design
March 6: Doreen Mashika for Unique Fair Trade Clutches
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