Byron Lars
American designer
Born: Oakland,
California, 19 January 1965. Education: Studied at the Brooks
Fashion Institute, Long Beach, 1983-85; Fashion Institute of
Technology, 1986-87; selected to represent USA at the International
Concours des Jeunes Créateurs de Mode, Paris, 1986, and at the
Festival du Lin, Monte Carlo, 1989. Career: Freelance sketcher and
pattern maker, Kevan Hall, Gary Gatyas, Ronaldus Shamask, Nancy
Crystal Blouse Co., New York, 1986-91; showed first collection,
1991; first full-scale New York show, 1992; designer, En Vogue
fashion collection, from 1993; signed licensing deal with San Siro
for Shirttails collection, 1995 (agreement nullified in court,
1997); Cinnabar Sensation Barbie, 1996; signed with Mattel for new
line of African American Barbies with designer clothes, 1997;
backer pulled funds and firm closed, 1997; launched new collection,
Green T, 1999. Exhibitions:Byron Lars' Illustrations, Ambassador
Gallery, New
Byron Lars posing with one of his ensembles
from his "Shirt Tales" show, spring 1996. © AP/Wide World
Photos.York, 1992. Awards: Vogue Cecil Beaton award for
Illustration, London, 1990. Address: 202 West 40th Street, New
York, NY 10018, U.S.A.
PUBLICATIONS ON
LARS:
Books
Stegemeyer, Anne, Who's Who in Fashion,
Third Edition, New York, 1996.
Articles
White, Constance C.R.,
"Rookie of the Year," in WWD, 24 April 1991.
Washington, Elsie
B., "Now: Brothers on Seventh Avenue," in Essence, November
1991.
Gerber, Robert, "Byron Lars: Elmer Fudd Fab," in Interview
(New York), December 1991.
"Byron Takes Off," in WWD, 15 April
1992.
Schiro, Anne-Marie, "The Sweet Smile of Success," in the
New York Times, 7 June 1992.
Darnton, Nina, "The Rainbow
Coalition," in Newsweek, 13 July 1992.
Walt, Vivienne, "From
Rags to Riches," in the San Francisco Examiner, 9 August
1992.
Piaggi, Anna, "By Air," in Vogue (Milan), August
1992.
Jaffe, Deborah, "Great Style," in Elle (New York),
September 1992.
"Working It!" in Essence, September
1992.
Baker, Martha, "(Byronic) Poses," in New York, 12 October
1992.
Donovan, Carrie, and Ruven Afanador, "New York," in the
New York Times Magazine, 1 November 1992.
Rubenstein, Hal,
"Return to Gilligan's Island, " in the New York Times Magazine, 17
January 1993.
Donovan, Carrie, and Mark Peterson, "It's Lyrical
on Seventh Avenue," in the New York Times Magazine, 28 March
1993.
Praeger, Emily, "Neither Virgin Nor Siren," in the New
York Times, 14 November 1993.
Bellafante, Ginia, "En Vogue in
Vogue?" in Time, 6 December 1993.
MacIntosh, Jeane, "His Dance
Cards are Full," in DNR, 28 February 1994.
Johnson, Eunice W.,
"Spotlightin' Legs," in Ebony, April 1994.
Houston, Ruth, "The
All-Important Jacket," in Black Elegance, April 1994.
Menkes,
Suzy, "A Touch of Modern Exotica," in the New York Times, 24 April
1994.
Dunn-Lee, Ionia, "Well Suited," in Black Elegance, October
1994.
White, Constance C.R., "Patterns," in the New York Times,
28February 1995.
——, "Patterns," in the New York Times, 4 April
1995.
"New York: Byron Lars," in WWD, 4 April 1995.
White,
Constance C.R., "Fur Tradition Versus Fur Fun," in the New York
Times, 23 May 1995.
——, "Vision for Changing Times," in the New
York Times, 4November 1995.
——, "Patterns," in the New York
Times, 23 January 1996.
——, "Three Successes, and So American,"
in the New York Times, 3 April 1996.
White, Renee Minus, "Byron
Lars Designs for Dolls—Barbies and Real Ones," in the New York
Amsterdam News, 20 April 1996.
Dunn-Lee, Ionia, "Fashion
Innovators on Seventh," in Black Elegance, September
1996.
"Bryon Lars Sues San Siro Over Contract, Trademark," in
DNR, 27December 1996.
"Byron's Secret," in WWD, 18 February
1997.
"Byron Loves Barbie," in WWD, 7 May 1997.
Gite, Lloyd,
"Breaking into the Fashion Biz: Career Opportunities," in Black
Enterprise, June 1997.
Williamson, Rusty, "Byron Lars Comes Back
with Spring Green TLine," in WWD, 20 July 2000.
Williamson,
Rusty, "Back in the New York Groove; Hot 1990s Designer Byron
Lars…," in WWD, 3 August 2000.
**
LARS'
CAREER:
The career of Byron Lars took wing with his
fall 1992 collection inspired by legendary aviatrix Amelia Earhart,
but Lars had already been one of the most closely watched and
praised newcomers in New York for several years. Mary Ann Wheaton,
who worked with Patrick
Byron Lars, fall 1996 collection:
ribbed knit dress with a hairdryer hat. © AP/Wide World
Photos.Kelly during his Paris years and took him from $700,000 in
business to $7.5 million in 18 months, took Lars under her wing in
February 1991 and placed his clothes in top stores within a
week.
The fall 1992 collection, Lars' first full-scale New York
show, consolidated his reputation (and, not coincidentally, his
business circumstances, including backing from C. Itoh &
Company) and was built on the same strengths that had characterized
his earlier work. In an interview in Essence (September 1992), Lynn
Manulis, president of Martha International (which became one of the
first stores to carry Lars' work), said, "It was the best and most
original collection that happened during the entire fashion week."
Lars also attracted the attention of dance legend Merce Cunningham,
with whom he became friends.
Appropriating from menswear, with a
special interest in the men's dress shirts and in stripes and
patterns especially associated with menswear, melding isolated
elements of exaggeration with conventional dress in a dry irony,
and responding to high fashion and street influence, Lars developed
a signature style while still in his twenties. According to
Anne-Marie Schiro (New York Times, 7 June 1992), stores "love his
clothes, which can be quirky yet classic, streetwise but never
vulgar. His inspiration may come from baseball or aviation, from
rappers or schoolgirls. And the accessories are outrageous: caps
with oversize crowns and two foot-long peaks, lunch boxes or boom
boxes as handbags. They make you smile."
Designer Jeffrey Banks
called Lars "the African-American Christian Francis Roth," relating
the former's incongruity with the latter's paradoxes of
sophisticated innocence in clothing. Roth and Lars share yet
another characteristic: they are both consummate masters of the
cut, enjoying the construction of the garment almost in the manner
of the couture. Lars is not merely making a joke of men's shirts
cross-dressed for women, but took the shirttail as a constructive
element, reshaped the bust, and deconstructed the shirt to be worn
by a woman. It is as much a tour de force in construction as it is
an apt idea of 1990s gender transaction. If Lars' clothes were
merely facetious, they would succeed as great fun; but they succeed
as great fashion because they are beautifully cut.
In adapting
menswear, Lars is attentive to feminine outcomes, offering a kind
of enhanced sensuality in the presence of male and female in one
garment. In many instances, peplums emphasize waist and hips (but
not with the 1980s power look), and the sartorial nuancing of shirt
and jacket for women directs attention to a broadened expanse of
the bust. Often including even men's ties, the result is
unequivocally feminine when Lars includes a built-in bra for
shaping. Even as he used airplane motifs in textiles in his epochal
fall 1992 collection, his fantasy was not a little boy's—aviator
jackets had a curvaceous femininity approximating Azzedine Alaïa
while shorts, short skirts, and leggings emphasized the female. A
duck hunter's outfit in plaid (with a duck decoy made into a
handbag), seemingly destined for the L.L. Bean catalogue before a
perverse, savvy drollery rendered it chic, and it was featured in
the Tribute to the Black Fashion Museum exhibition at the Fashion
Institute of Technology, New York, in spring 1992.
Even before
the Earhart collection, Lars was influenced by the 1940s. His
twists of menswear in the best Rosie-the-Riveter tradition and his
fascination with the sarong recall the period. Both shirts and
sarongs depended upon tying, a sense of the improvised wrap, that
the designer built into the garment. In this, Lars seemed an
antecedent in Claire McCardell, whose lifelong interest in casual
wraps is similar to Lars' fascination with the shaping and
informality afforded by tying. He has also been influenced by pop
singers, such as the 1993 En Vogue collection, inspired by the
group of the same name. The following year, he created a collection
based on African themes; the next, 1995, he had fun with fur,
joining other designers such as Yeohlee Teng, Ben Kahn and various
others in designing fur collections; and in 1996 Mattel asked Lars
to design a collectible Barbie doll, complete with her own fashion
wardrobe. His collection that year was a result of being inspired
by Barbie, with charcoal gray and cocoa brown colors gracing the
line. The Barbie foray proved so successful Mattel asked Lars in
1997 to develop an entire line of African American Barbie dolls,
all dressed in designer duds. The same year Lars negotiated with
Victoria's Secret to design a collection of sexy, fun cotton
lingerie separates and silk robes bearing the firm's
logo.
Unfortunately for Lars, the walls came crashing down in
late 1997 despite a slew of promising licensing deals. After his
financial backing was withdrawn, Lars had little more than the
Mattel Barbie collaboration to keep him going. Commenting on the
dry period to Women's Wear Daily (20 July 2000), "I freelanced with
lots of different types of companies and stretched my creative
wings." Yet the times were far from rosy, and he learned a tough
lesson on licensing deals. "I'd rather flip burgers at McDonald's
than go through that again," he declared. Lars did, however,
orchestrate a comeback with a new funky collection in 1999, called
Green T, with his name conspicuously absent from the label. "With
Green T, we intentionally left my name off the label because we
wanted to see if it could fly without a designer angle. We just
wanted to do a really great product with design integrity at a
really great price."
Lars is only one of many African American
designers achieving prominence in New York in the last decade.
Others include C.D. Greene, Gordon Henderson, Michael McCollum,
Tracy Reese, and Kevin Smith, all inspired by the works of previous
designers such as Stephen Burrows, Patrick Kelly, Thierry Mugler,
and Willi Smith. If still considered a prodigy today, since he is
only in his thirties, Byron Lars is making clever yet important
clothes, wearable ideas, wondrous social transplants and mutations,
and some of the most sensitively and sensuously cut garments in
America.
—Richard Martin; updated by Daryl F. Mallett and Owen
James