Erin O'Connor is Chanel
Travel Wallet used to being judged on her appearance. The 33-year-old
English supermodel whom Chanel's Karl Lagerfeld once described as “one of the
best models in the world” is so striking that the eyes of everyone in the room
linger on her angular, disarmingly symmetrical features and elongated frame.Her
aesthetic – one which has the biggest fashion designers in the world clamouring
to send her down their catwalks – is haughty, regal, otherworldly, so it's
surprising to find her so, well, down-to-earth when we meet in a dark corner of
the May Fair Hotel in London.In a black tailored suit, ox-blood brogues and red
lipstick she is at once softly feminine and androgynous. Her posture and bone
structure seem somehow aristocratic, but she is, famously, a working-class girl
from Walsall near Birmingham. She can be frivolous, but is generally serious,
speaking in confident, measured tones, but occasionally breaking into a laugh
that's akin to a squeal. She loves fashion, but doesn't follow trends. Couture
designers adore her, but she became one of the faces of Marks Chanel
Classic Wallet Spencer in 2007 (“they called me their ‘wild card girl'”) .
And while she is a self-proclaimed “freak of nature” she's unnervingly
beautiful.“Someone once referred to modelling as being like winning the lottery
gene pool,” she says with a confused laugh. “It's such an odd way to put things
but what is different about modelling is that the industry often picks you. And
a lot of models are, like me, from small towns, who often felt a sense of
isolation growing up, of not being accepted amongst their peers because they
were different. And I do think modelling offers up that sense of ‘well you are
different, and that's quite alright.'”Growing up, O'Connor was 6ft by the age of
15. She was flat-chested with large feet and a large nose, and hid behind
waist-length black hair, earning her the nickname “Morticia”. Teaching was her
chosen path, before serendipity struck during a chance encounter with a model
scout while rummaging in a bargain bin at the Clothes Show Live in 1996.“At
first I thought that she thought I was stealing something,” O'Connor says with a
chuckle chanel purse
cake.
“She produced a Polaroid camera and I'd never really seen myself that way.
Growing up, we took endless photographs and the films were shoved in the drawer
and never developed. So it was quite an instant reaction to see myself like that
on Polaroid film. I was wearing braces and everything else and she liked what
she saw before I could really understand what the appeal was.”Within Chanel Coin
Purse months she was modelling for Versace, but the lanky girl who was used
to being teased for her height still couldn't understand what all the fuss was
about. “I really did need that push because I was quite happy where I was, thank
you very much,” she says.“And then all of a sudden I had to believe in fate
because it was a relatively ordinary day but my life changed forever. I think
naiveté was my armour and I allowed myself to be completely carried by that so I
literally got the bus to the train station, landed in Victoria, put on a nice
outfit and never looked back.”Where O'Connor couldn't see the appeal, the rest
of the fashion world could. At a time when supermodels, from Cindy Crawford to
Claudia Schiffer were every fleshy inch the male fantasy, she heralded a new era
of androgynous “freak chic”. Lagerfeld said: “Her face is like a Roman vase –
not a standard beauty, but a modern anti-beauty,” while actress Anjelica Houston
told her Chanel
Purse Forum “You'll never be pretty but you'll always be magnificent.”“She
isn't only a model,” said Jean-Paul Gaultier. “She is quite like art. She is
like theatre … I should love to be with her every day.”Gaultier was right of
course. She is far more than just a model. Not only has she strutted and posed
for most of the top luxury brands in the world and become the face of the
British high street thanks to Marks & Spencer, but she has become the
friendly spokesperson for an industry that's often perceived as aloof.As a past
vice-chair of the British Fashion Council, she has a strong association with
London Fashion Week – which kicks off on Friday – and it's a relationship that
goes far beyond stepping out on the catwalk. In 2007 she founded the Model
Sanctuary, a relaxing space during Fashion Week where models can have access to
nutritionists, osteopaths and life coaches, and generally take a break from
their hectic schedules. They see over 300 models a day, most of whom are in
their late teens.“First and foremost they're young people in their own right,”
she says Chanel
Gst .
没有评论:
发表评论