of clothing, the balance of a garment. With Halston, Khanalso immersed himself in the cultural fabric of the city. TheNew York of Elizabeth Taylor and Betty Ford and LizaMinnelli and Truman Capote and Andy Warhol, who taughthim to draw. âDesigning is important, but passion is abouthow you live, how you interact with society. To know thewoman youâre designing for, you have to be a part of thatsociety,â he says. âWhen I would come back to India,my parentsâtheyâre simple folksâwould scold mefor things. My two lives were so weird, and I keptthem separate. There was Studio 54 and then theIndian household. When I would get on a plane, it wasalmost like taking off a skin.âNot so anymore. Itâs not a matter ofreconciling different identitiesâheâs beenaway longer than he lived in Indiaâbutabout embracing how well they informhis designs. Cultures co-exist in hisclothes, just as in his life. His Fall 2018range, which he showcased at New YorkFashion Week, celebrated the idea of aglobal woman, awash with influencesfrom Spanish ruffles to Peruvianhandiwork and, of course, Indianembroidery. A powerful display ofdiversity by an Indian immigrant in post-Trump America. âLast collection was allabout empowerment. That was more of apolitical move than an art move, whereyouâre saying you want the world to be abig beautiful place. Weâre becoming awarethat we all need to be more united.âIn the 36 years heâs been in the industry,heâs lost the Afro from when he first started out, but kept therestlessness, the need to do more. Which brings us to his mostambitious project till dateâa fashion school in Miami, adjacent tohis new headquarters, expected to open in 2021. âThe thoughtwas, how could I teach the techniques that Iâve learned andmastered, with my relationship with India and the rest of theworld? Fashion is not just art, itâs economics and business. If youcanât combine the two, you can be the greatest artist in the worldbut youâll die hungry. I want to have a school so students can seelearn how the industry runs.âRecently, he also launched a new, more affordable label, NK32Naeem Khan at Neiman Marcus stores across the United States.And though he doesnât plan to retail in India anytime soonâthechaos that sparks his creativity stifles businessâhe looks to hismotherland for validation. âIt used to bug me, dressing the First Ladyand not getting any acknowledgement from the government; not athank you, but that they were proud of my work,â he says. âI still seekapproval from India, itâs my people.â â ``````Fall 2018``````Fall 2018``````Fall 2018``````Fall 2012
âMy Indiannesscomes from thechaos, the colour,the embroidery,when there is noinhibition of mixingcolours. WhatI know in fashion isfrom India.âVICTOR VIRGILE/GAMMA-RAPHO VIA GETTY IMAGES; FILIPPO FIOR / IMAXTREE
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