Jacket thumbnail 1
Jacket thumbnail 2
Not currently on display at the V&A

Jacket

1990s (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This outfit was worn by a gay black woman. It was displayed in the V&A's Streetstyle exhibition of 1994-95 to represent lesbian style of 1993-94.

There are various terms used within the gay community to describe particular styles of dress and appearance. For example, "butch" may be used to describe an exaggerated masculinity in both male and female dress. Inge's friends described her style as "butch-dandy", because she wore men's jackets, shirts and trousers, but with flamboyant ties and cuff links. She acknowledged her African ancestry with dreadlocked hair and brightly coloured head-wraps, and also wore lipstick.

Inge used her clothes to make political statements about race and sexuality. She said: "My clothes carry codes for my sexuality which will be too subtle for those narrow minded people who find lipstick, dreadlocks and a black skin incompatible with lesbianism."


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Tailored worsted
Brief description
Jacket, navy worsted, Seeley, Rapid City, United States, 1990s
Physical description
Man's tailored jacket in navy worsted.
Dimensions
  • Length: 80.5cm
  • Shoulders width: 44cm
  • Chest width: 52cm
Production typeReady to wear
Marks and inscriptions
'SIR SHOP / SEELEY / RAPID CITY S D'
Object history
Registered File number 1994/1527, Streetstyle exibition 1994-1995, in the exhibition it was part of an outfit called 'Lesbian Style UK 1993-4' (includes the shorts T.714-1994, the trousers T.709-1994, the shirt T.711-1994, the belt T.712-1994, the cuff links T.717-1994, the boots T.715-1994, the socks T.716-1994 and the scarf T.713-1994).


Part of an outfit worn by Inge Blackman to represent 1993-94 Lesbian Style for the Street Style exhibition held at the V&A between 1994-95. She said of this outfit:

"My friends describe my style as butch-dandy: classic men's jackets, flamboyant ties, cuff links, bright head-wraps, and of course, lipstick! I wear dreadlocks to show respect for my African ancestry. My clothes carry codes for my sexuality which will be too subtle for those narrow minded people who find lipstick, dreadlocks and a black skin incompatible with lesbianism."
Summary
This outfit was worn by a gay black woman. It was displayed in the V&A's Streetstyle exhibition of 1994-95 to represent lesbian style of 1993-94.

There are various terms used within the gay community to describe particular styles of dress and appearance. For example, "butch" may be used to describe an exaggerated masculinity in both male and female dress. Inge's friends described her style as "butch-dandy", because she wore men's jackets, shirts and trousers, but with flamboyant ties and cuff links. She acknowledged her African ancestry with dreadlocked hair and brightly coloured head-wraps, and also wore lipstick.

Inge used her clothes to make political statements about race and sexuality. She said: "My clothes carry codes for my sexuality which will be too subtle for those narrow minded people who find lipstick, dreadlocks and a black skin incompatible with lesbianism."
Bibliographic reference
Surfers, Soulies, Skinheads & Skaters : Subcultural Style from the Forties to the Nineties Described in the exhibition publication, part of an outfit called 'Lesbian Style UK 1993-4'.
Collection
Accession number
T.710-1994

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Record createdJanuary 7, 2011
Record URL
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