Published 22:56 IST, November 8th 2020
Brazil fashion shows highlight affirmative action
Bold styles are usually the talk of the town for Sao Paulo Fashion Week (SPFW). This year, couture connoisseurs in Brazil's most cosmopolitan city have focused on the models — more specifically, the color of their skin.
Bold styles are usually the talk of the town for Sao Paulo Fashion Week (SPFW). This year, couture connoisseurs in Brazil's most cosmopolitan city have focused on the models — more specifically, the color of their skin.
For the first time, designers in Latin America's largest fashion show, which wraps on Sunday, have been obliged to ensure 50% of their models are either Black, Afro-descendant or Indigenous.
The Brazilian fashion world was jolted into doing some soul-searching this year when, after the killing of George Floyd by police in the United States sparked protests and discussion over racial injustice, three Black models shared personal stories of experiencing racism in the industry during a raw, hours long talk with Sao Paulo Fashion Week founder Paulo Borges.
Broadcast live via social media, that conversation was the first of many culminating in SPFW's adoption of the new rule, Borges said in an interview with The Associated Press.
Fashion-forward affirmative action is the latest effort to boost representation through edict in Brazil, where a previous, left-leaning government enacted race-based quotas in federal universities.
Others have followed more recently, with one retail giant, Magazine Luiza, creating a Black-only trainee program in September and a Supreme Court ruling that required political parties to distribute campaign funds this month using new racial guidelines.
More than half of Brazilians identify as either Black or biracial, but you wouldn't know it from the country's magazines and ads, where images of light-skinned people remain dominant.
A century after Brazil became the Western Hemisphere's last country to abolish slavery, in 1888, the phenomenon was exemplified by the popular TV show "Xou da Xuxa," or "Xuxa's Show," hosted by the blonde, blue-eyed entertainer of the same name and backed by a bevy of young women with mostly matching features.
Launched in the 1980s on the monolithic Globo network, it moved a generation of Black girls to straighten their hair, according to Marcelo Dias, national coordinator for entrepreneurism at Brazil's Unified Black Movement.
Sao Paulo Fashion Week was born in 1995.
In 2009, facing an investigation over discrimination, organizers signed an agreement with public prosecutors requiring 10% of models to be Black, Afro-descendant or Indigenous.
Still, there were calls for stronger action.
SPFW began recommending designers' models be at least 20% Black, Afro-descendant, Asian or Indigenous.
Angela Brito, a Rio de Janeiro based designer who moved to Brazil from Cape Verde more than two decades ago, on Friday showed the AP her 2020 collection which she dubbed "Identity," blending traditional woven cloth from her home country with other styles.
Even before SPFW's race requirement, she employed all-Black casts and has sought to highlight the issue.
"When you have an entire team from the same ethnicity and you talk about an issue that you are not familiar with, chances are that you will make a mistake," Briton said. "I think a diverse team is key so we can minimize the impacts mainly of racism."
Because of the coronavirus pandemic, the usual cloistered runway shows this year were jettisoned in favor of videos that were projected onto the sides of buildings and monuments, displayed on a truck circulating throughout the city and broadcast on social media.
On a recent day, Ana Luiza dos Santos halted her jog to sit on the sidewalk and watch one of the feeds from the fashion show.
"This is a nice way to open space for us Blacks," said dos Santos, 55. "This is so cool."
One of the most popular videos has been an eight-minute clip by the Korshi 01 brand.
It opens with a Black woman swiveling in a chair and then staring defiantly through square-shaped glasses, before cutting to a second Black model being made-up by a woman with flowing curls.
The piece suggests that models who before were waiting in the wings are now taking center stage.
Over the past decade, a rising percentage of Brazilians have been identifying as biracial or Black in government surveys, and less as white.
Race is a fluid thing in multi-hued Brazil, with siblings often disagreeing with each other over their race and people often changing how they self-identify, so how Blackness gets defined isn't a simple question.
Census takers rely on people's racial self-identification, while applicants to civil servant jobs and universities with race-based quotas must either present documentation, such as birth certificates, or appear before a commission that will make its own determination based on their physical appearance.
Sometimes that results in disputes.
SPFW considers models with at least one Black grandparent to be Afro-descendant and able to help designers meet their diversity quotas.
Should doubts arise about a model's race, it requests additional documentation, its press representative said.
While the SPFW's diversity rule hasn't generated any notable public opposition, affirmative-action policies in both the private and public sectors have drawn fire from the political right.
Updated 22:56 IST, November 8th 2020