Shantavia Beale II
Process
Kehinde Wiley describes collaborating with Riccardo Tisci in an 2014 FLARE interview:
For your 2012 exhibit featured in the film, An Economy of Grace, you had Riccardo Tisci custom make the dresses for your sittings. What inspired this particular collaboration?We had a number of conversations about the history of art—we walked through The Louvre together, he would send me drawings and ideas with notes. He loves fashion history and he knows it in such an encyclopedic way that it was interesting to get to talk about not only how a fabric lies on the body, but the ways that that fabric has been used in different time periods and how it connotes a different type of elegance, class and status.
Your images of women came from carefully constructed photos—the dresses, hairstyles, make-up. Was there a particular reason that you didn’t picture them in their street clothes, as you most often do with men?I wanted “An Economy of Grace” to feature another way to look at clothing, another function. It goes back to the question of armor, class and status—everything was very calculated. As opposed to just talking about the exclusive nature of the clothing in historical art, I had to find the most exclusive couture house and work with Riccardo Tisci. It becomes so unthinkably special for each one of the women involved in the project that it was a much better example of the history that we were quoting.