Fashion Icon Dame Zandra Rhodes & Vogue’s André Leon Talley Connect in Conversation: Fashion is Art

Exclusive Event at Christopher Guy’s New York showroom on October 1

Iconic textile and fashion designer Dame Zandra Rhodes, DBE RDI, and André Leon Talley, contributing editor and former Editor-at-Large for American Vogue, will discuss the creative process, inspiration, their careers, and the profound influence the legendary Diana Vreeland had on them during a private and intimate event on October 1, 2015 at Christopher Guy’s magnificent New York Showroom. The event will also celebrate Dame Zandra‘s first-ever wall collection.

Dame Zandra will also unveil four bespoke textile prints to be sold exclusively through Christopher Guy:

Christopher Guy, being a visionary, told me I should do wall art with my beautiful textiles,” said Dame Zandra Rhodes. He considers my work as more than textile and fashion, and thought I had a lot more to offer to the world of interiors. These art pieces fit in with the beauty of the Christopher Guy interior image, and the CG showroom brings my art to gorgeous, elegant living room surroundings and reflect my passionate belief that art is to be lived with, not just stay in museums.

15% of the proceeds of Dame Zandra’s wall art sold at the event will be donated to The Boys and Girls Club of America.

Event host Christopher Guy Harrison, founder of luxury brand Christopher Guy, said: “It is a great privilege to have two of the world’s most celebrated fashion icons come together at our New York Showroom. Zandra is truly unique and a pioneer in her field, and we are proud to have her wall art sold through our showrooms.”

THIRTEEN’s American Masters Series Presents Filmmaker/Photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders’ New Documentary, The Women’s List

Premiering Nationwide Friday, September 25 on PBS

All Images by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders and provided by American Masters

Meet 15 women who have created and defined contemporary American culture in American Masters: The Women’s List, premiering nationwide Friday, September 25, 9-10 p.m. on PBS (check local listings) and available the same day on DVD via Perfect Day Films Inc.

The newest chapter of filmmaker/photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders’ List documentary series (American Masters: The Boomer List, The Black List, The Latino List, The Out List) features intimate interviews with Madeleine Albright, U.S. Secretary of State, 1997-2001; Gloria Allred, lawyer; Laurie Anderson, artist; Sara Blakely, entrepreneur; Margaret Cho, comedian; Edie Falco, actor; Elizabeth Holmes, scientist and entrepreneur; Betsey Johnson, fashion designer; Alicia Keys, singer-songwriter; Aimee Mullins, athlete and fashion model; Nancy Pelosi, politician; Rosie Perez, actor; Shonda Rhimes, writer-producer; Wendy Williams, talk show host and Nia Wordlaw, pilot.AM-WomensList-horizontal-key-art_FINAL-no-tune-in

American Masters: The Women’s List focuses on these individuals’ exceptional achievements, struggles and identities. All trailblazers in their respective fields, these women share their experiences struggling against discrimination and overcoming challenges to make their voices heard and their influence felt. Toni Morrison opens the film with a reading of an introduction she wrote specifically for The Women’s List.

Madeleine Albright. Credit: © Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Madeleine Albright. Credit: © Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Madeleine Albright, U.S. Secretary of State, 1997-2001: Leaders are made by the situations they are involved in. I think that some rise to the occasion and some do not.”***

Madeleine Albright was the first woman to serve as the United States’ Secretary of State. Born in Czechoslovakia, Albright and her family emigrated to the U.S. through Ellis Island when she was 11 years old. Albright served, under President Clinton, as Secretary of State from 1997 – 2001. At the time of her appointment, she became the highest-ranking woman to have served in the U.S. government.

Gloria Allred and “American Masters: The Women’s List” filmmaker/photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders on the set of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Credit: ©Greenfield-Sanders Studio

Gloria Allred and “American Masters: The Women’s List” filmmaker/photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders on the set of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Credit: ©Greenfield-Sanders Studio

Gloria Allred, Lawyer: A feminist is simply a person who believes in legal, social, political and economic equality for women with men.”***

Gloria Allred is a leading women’s rights lawyer. Her firm handles more women’s rights cases than any other private firm in the nation and has won hundreds of millions of dollars for victims.

Laurie Anderson, Artist: I am a New Yorker, one; I’m an artist, two; I’m a woman, three.”***

Laurie Anderson is an experimental performance artist, composer and musician. Anderson is a pioneer in electronic music and has invented several devices that she has used in her recordings and performance art shows.

Sara Blakely, Entrepreneur: Spanx really came from my own butt. I did not like the way it looked in pants.”***

Sara Blakely is an American businessperson and founder of Spanx, a hosiery company based in Atlanta, Georgia. In 2012, Blakely was named in Time magazine’s annual “Time 100” list of the 100 most influential people in the world. As of 2014, she is listed as the 93rd most powerful woman in the world by Forbes.

Margaret Cho on the set of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Credit: ©Greenfield-Sanders Studio

Margaret Cho on the set of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Credit: ©Greenfield-Sanders Studio

Margaret Cho, Comedian: When I was 14, I told my mother I was going to drop out of high school and go do stand-up comedy. All she said was ‘Oh maybe it’s better if you just die,’ because it was killing her that I was doing this.”***

Margaret Cho is an American comedian, fashion designer, actress, author and singer-songwriter. Cho is best known for her stand-up routines, through which she critiques social and political problems, especially those pertaining to race and sexuality.

Edie Falco, Actor: There is no question that sobriety has made me a better actor, made me a better person.”***

Edie Falco is an Emmy®-winning actress who won acclaim for her roles on the television series The Sopranos and Nurse Jackie. A mother of two children, Falco has appeared on Broadway, in feature films and on television throughout her career.

Elizabeth Holmes, Scientist and Entrepreneur: I believe in the unlimited power of women in the context of science and engineering.”***

Elizabeth Holmes is an American entrepreneur. She is the CEO of Theranos, a blood test company, which she founded in 2003 at age 19 while she was a chemical engineering major at Stanford University. She is the world’s youngest self-made female billionaire to date.

Betsey Johnson. Credit: © Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Betsey Johnson. Credit: © Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Betsey Johnson, Fashion Designer: [In the 1960s]…you could take LSD but you couldn’t wear a pantsuit.”***

Betsey Johnson is an award-winning fashion designer known for her whimsical and feminine designs. Johnson started her career in New York City in the 60s and was part of Andy Warhol’s underground scene that included the Velvet Underground, Edie Sedgwick and Lou Reed. In 2012, Johnson celebrated 40 years of her namesake brand.

Alicia Keys, Singer-Songwriter: I’m definitely a nerd. I’m a cool-ass nerd, but I am definitely a nerd.”***

Alicia Keys is a 15-time Grammy® Award-winning singer/songwriter/producer, an accomplished actress, a New York Times best-selling author, an entrepreneur and a powerful force in the world of philanthropy and in the global fight against HIV and AIDS.

Aimee Mullins, Athlete and Fashion Model: It’s an objective fact that I am a double amputee, but it’s very subjective opinion as to whether that makes me disabled.”***

Aimee Mullins is an athlete, actress and fashion model, who first became famous for her athletic accomplishments. She was born with a medical condition that resulted in the amputation of both of her lower legs and has become one of the most prominent thinkers on the topic of prosthetic innovation.

Nancy Pelosi on the set of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Credit: ©Greenfield-Sanders Studio

Nancy Pelosi on the set of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Credit: ©Greenfield-Sanders Studio

Nancy Pelosi, Politician: When I was growing up in the 50s it wasn’t quite the same. Fathers were more protective and now they see all of the possibilities for their daughters.”***

Nancy Pelosi is the Minority Leader of the United States House of Representatives and served as the 60th Speaker of the House from 2007 to 2011. She is the only woman to have served as the House Speaker and to date is the highest-ranking female politician in American history.

Rosie Perez. Credit: © Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Rosie Perez. Credit: © Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Rosie Perez, Actor: Women of color: if you’re over 40 and you get fat, you will work. But if you’re hot and over 40 and a woman of color, they don’t know what to do with you.”***

Rosie Perez is an Oscar-nominated actress who starred in such films as White Men Can’t Jump, Fearless and Do the Right Thing. Perez started her performance career as a dancer and went on to choreograph music videos and the television series In Living Color. An activist who raises awareness for many causes, Perez has acted on stage, on television and in feature films.

Shonda Rhimes, Writer-Producer: Nobody ever asks a man how he gets stuff done. Nobody asks a man how he finds balance.”***

Shonda Rhimes is a screenwriter, director and producer. Rhimes is best known as the creator, head writer, executive producer and showrunner of the medical drama television series Grey’s Anatomy, its spin-off Private Practice and political thriller series Scandal. Rhimes also serves as executive producer for legal series How to Get Away with Murder. In May 2007, Rhimes was named one of TIME magazine’s 100 people who help shape the world.

Wendy Williams, Talk Show Host: Being tall and big was probably more painful than being black.”***

Wendy Williams is a media personality, actress, comedian, author and a daytime talk show host. She hosts the nationally syndicated television talk show The Wendy Williams Show.

Nia Wordlaw and “American Masters: The Women’s List” filmmaker/photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders on the set of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Credit: ©Greenfield-Sanders Studio

Nia Wordlaw and “American Masters: The Women’s List” filmmaker/photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders on the set of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Credit: ©Greenfield-Sanders Studio

Nia Wordlaw, Pilot: I am probably 1 of 25 women that fly for a major airline.”***

Nia Wordlaw is an African-American airline pilot and one of the few women flying for a major airline in the U.S. today.

As a lifelong feminist, I’m proud to have made The Women’s List and excited to have another one of my films join the American Masters library,” said Greenfield-Sanders.

Filmmaker/photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders is director and producer of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Photo Credit: ©Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Filmmaker/photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders is director and producer of “American Masters: The Women’s List.” Photo Credit: ©Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Photographer/filmmaker Timothy Greenfield-Sanders is known for his strikingly intimate portraits of world leaders and major cultural figures. From presidents to porn stars, artists to Oscar winners, Greenfield-Sanders’ work defines a certain cultural photographic canon of our time.

His portraits can be found in numerous museum collections, including The Museum of Modern Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. In 2012, he exhibited all 50 portraits from The Black List series at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.

Greenfield-Sanders has produced and directed 10 feature documentaries to date. He won a Grammy Award for his 1998 film American Masters — Lou Reed: Rock and Roll Heart and a NAACP Spirit Award in 2009 for The Black List: Volume 1.

His recent films include American Masters: The Boomer List, which premiered on PBS in 2014, The Out List, which premiered on HBO in 2013 and About Face: Supermodels Then and Now, which premiered at Sundance and aired on HBO in 2012. His portraits of The Boomer List’s subjects were on display at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., from September 26, 2014-July 5, 2015.

Greenfield-Sanders has published numerous books, including The Boomer List (Luxury), The Black List (Atria), The Latino List (LPC), The Out List (LPC), Movie Stars (Skira), Face To Face (Skira), Look (Powerhouse), XXX: 30 Porn-Star Portraits (Bulfinch), Timothy Greenfield-Sanders (ACS) and Art World (Fotofolio). He received his B.A. from Columbia University and his M.F.A. from The American Film Institute. Continue reading