This past March would have been her 75th birthday. She called Sims “one of the first supermodels to expand beyond the catwalk and the editorial of fashion.” Naomi “really laid that foundation” for models to expand their careers this way, said Luckett, a blueprint followed in later decades by the likes of Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford and Christy Turlington. Luckett’s archival digging demonstrates Sims did all her own research and writing. “What model was writing books about how to be a top model?” “I was blown away by the depth of her life and her life experiences,” Luckett said. She also turned author, publishing four books including “All About Health and Beauty for the Black Woman” (1976) and “How to Be a Top Model” (1979). Still in her mid-20s, she got into the beauty business, launching what became a multimillion-dollar enterprise selling wigs, makeup and perfume to Black women. The New York Times later called Sims’ Ladies’ Home Journal appearance “a consummate moment for the Black is Beautiful movement.”Īll that alone earned Sims her place in history.īut not long after she joined Warhol himself on the December 1972 cover of Interview - intriguingly, his sole cover appearance in his own magazine during his lifetime - Sims quit modeling. Sims also supported and mentored many Black models, including Beverly Johnson, who in 1974 became the first Black model on the cover of the U.S. That LIFE cover - another milestone for a Black model - followed less than a year later. women’s magazine, the Ladies’ Home Journal. In late 1968, Sims became the first Black model to grace the cover of a mainstream U.S. Soon she was getting steady work through the famed Wilhelmina Models agency, including a TV ad for AT&T. Her trajectory changed in August 1967, when she appeared on the cover of the New York Times fashion supplement. To earn money, she tried modeling but said she was sometimes told her skin was too dark. Like Andy Warhol a generation earlier, Sims quickly left Pittsburgh for New York City, on a scholarship to the Fashion Institute of Technology. Luckett’s interview subjects have included the late John Brewer, a local author and historian of Black Pittsburgh who was Sims’ Westinghouse schoolmate. After coming north as a child with her mother and sisters, she lived in Lincoln-Lemington and graduated from Westinghouse High School in 1966. One advantage to undertaking that project in Pittsburgh (where Luckett has lived since graduating from Pitt) is that Sims largely grew up here. It’s also linked to her long-term goal to write Sims’ biography. The show, featuring photographic prints, original copies of magazines and more, grew out of Luckett’s abiding interest in the groundbreaking model turned author and businesswoman. “Naomi Sims: (Super) Model Citizen” is the new exhibit at ALMA | LEWIS, the art space Luckett, a writer and art historian, operates in Point Breeze North. And Naomi Sims would become pretty important to her daughter, too, not least because of a Pittsburgh connection. But Luckett said this glossy magazine held particularly deep meaning for her mother: That LIFE model was a contemporary of her mom’s who shared her (and Luckett’s) home state of Mississippi. It was then common for Black folks to memorialize the still-rare instances when Black people made a splash in white media. 17, 1969, issue of LIFE magazine, whose cover featured the head and bare shoulders of a beautiful Black woman. ĭecades ago, Kilolo Luckett found a keepsake of her mother’s. Sign up here to get it every Wednesday afternoon. This is WESA Arts, a weekly newsletter by Bill O'Driscoll providing in-depth reporting about the Pittsburgh area art scene.
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