WARDROBE CRISIS with Clare Press

Are You Posh & White Enough for a Career in the Creative Arts? Rahemur Rahman on Strategies for System Change


Listen Later

Rich, white and privileged - the creative arts sector has a class problem. Particularly in class-obsessed Britain, where middle-class people are twice as likely to work in creative jobs than their working class contemporaries. According to the Evening Standard, "the worlds of TV, film, music and the arts are dominated by straight, able-bodied white men living in London, despite them only accounting for 3.5% of the [UK] population."


Not that this is purely a UK problem. In New York, 85% of artists represented by commercial galleries are white. In Australia, where one in four of us were born overseas, culturally and linguistically diverse creatives are still barely represented in fashion at all. And consider the global luxury brands, with their spate of recent cookie-cutter creative director hires - can anyone actually tell the difference between these men from their photos alone?


But, "What about the new editor at Vogue?" I hear you say. Too often, the celebrated hire is still the only Black or brown person in the room.


I bet you can think of a thousand places where career progress is affected by your postcode, where you went to school and what your parents did. And lurking behind all that: race, gender, sexuality, difference, not to mention how much cash you've got...


It's time for a power shift!


Meet Rahemur Rahman, a British-Bengali artist, educator and designer who is determined to change the system, not simply tinker round the edges of representation. He made it, despite the odds. Raised in working class Tower Hamlets, he studied fashion at Central Saint MartinsHe studied fashion at Central Saint Martins, where he now teaches. Designs from his debut London Fashion Week collection menswear collection were acquired by the V&A Museum. Now, he's the director of training and development at Bari, a new incubator supporting South Asian creatives in East London as part of the British Bangladeshi Fashion Council.


This is a lively conversation about what it takes to, practically, turn things around - not just talk about it. Hint: no true diversity and inclusion without addressing the class barrier!

We're also talking the creative innovation meets heritage craft, social impact fashion, holidays with friends, and the joy of working on what matters.


Check the shownotes for links & further reading.

Tell us what you think!

 

Can you help us spread the word ?

Wardrobe Crisis is an independent production.

We don't believe in barriers to entry and are determined to keep this content free.

If you value it, please help by sharing your favourite Episodes, and rating and reviewing us in Apple or

Spotify.

Thank you!

Find Clare on Instagram @mrspress

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

WARDROBE CRISIS with Clare PressBy Clare Press

  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7

4.7

198 ratings


More shows like WARDROBE CRISIS with Clare Press

View all
The Glossy Podcast by Glossy

The Glossy Podcast

247 Listeners

The Business of Fashion Podcast by The Business of Fashion

The Business of Fashion Podcast

570 Listeners

Dressed: The History of Fashion by Dressed Media

Dressed: The History of Fashion

1,499 Listeners

After Work Drinks by Isabelle Truman & Grace O'Neill

After Work Drinks

84 Listeners

Articles of Interest by Avery Trufelman

Articles of Interest

3,297 Listeners

Let's Get Dressed by Liv Perez

Let's Get Dressed

276 Listeners

The Run-Through with Vogue by Vogue

The Run-Through with Vogue

689 Listeners

Haptic & Hue by Jo Andrews

Haptic & Hue

286 Listeners

The Who What Wear Podcast by Who What Wear

The Who What Wear Podcast

92 Listeners

Check Your Thread: Sewing More Sustainably by Zoe Edwards

Check Your Thread: Sewing More Sustainably

87 Listeners

Nothing To Wear by Mamamia Podcasts

Nothing To Wear

100 Listeners

The Debrief by The Business of Fashion

The Debrief

41 Listeners

Sustain This! by Alyssa Beltempo, Signe Hansen & Christina Mychas

Sustain This!

199 Listeners

Fashion People by Audacy | Puck

Fashion People

167 Listeners

Style-ish by Shameless Media

Style-ish

34 Listeners