Style Icon Iris Apfel, an American Original, Is Dead at 102
âYouâve either got or you havenât got style,â goes the old Sammy Cahn lyric. âIf youâve got it, you stand out a mile.â Iris Apfel, with her signature oversized glasses and distinctive outfitsâwho died today in Palm Beachâstood out a mile, and then some.
The centenarian wore her age well. On the occasion of her 100th birthday, the indefatigable fashion influencer and style icon posted an Instagram slideshow displaying things she was older than. These included: the Cyclone roller coaster, the Chrysler Building, Rockefeller Center, and the Empire State Building. Within the fashion world, she wasâin a wordâa monument.
In September 2022, at the age of 101, she posted her thoughts on fashion versus style to her more than two million social media followers. They are âtwo entirely different things,â she said. âYou can easily buy your way into being fashionable. Style, I think, is in your DNA. It implies originality and courage. The worst that can happen is you can fail, and you donât die from that.â
It was certainly in her DNA. In Iris, Albert Mayslesâs 2014 award-winning documentary, Apfel recalled being taken aside by Loehmannâs department store founder Frieda Loehmann, who told her, âYoung lady, Iâve been watching you. Youâre not pretty and youâll never be pretty, but it doesnât matter. You have something much better. You have style.â Her philosophy that âmore is more and less is a boreâ made her a self-described âaccidental iconâ (which is also the title of her 2018 memoir) and âgeriatric starlet.â
In 2005, the Costume Institute at The Metropolitan Museum of Art mounted an exhibition of Apfelâs clothes. âRara Avis: Selections from the Iris Apfel Collectionâ presented 40 of her sartorially striking accessories and ensembles. In Mayslesâs documentary, Harold Koda, the curator in charge of the Costume Institute at the time, noted, âSheâs an artist. What she uses all of her clothing and accessories to do is compose a new vision. That, to me, is creativity.â
Apfel was an American original. Martha Stewart once dubbed her âa legendary collector of fashionââpart archivist, part aesthete, part social anthropologist. Apfel radically juxtaposed high and low fashion, as The Met noted: âDior haute couture with flea market finds, 19th-century ecclesiastical vestments with Dolce & Gabbana lizard trousers. With remarkable panache and discernment, she combines colors, textures, and patterns without regard to period, provenance, and, ultimately, aesthetic conventions.â
She described her personal style to Vogue in 2022: âItâs big and itâs bold and itâs a tangible expression about how I feel about things.â One thing it was not, she emphasized, was planned. âI just do it unconsciously,â she said. âIt is a creative exercise that I seem to do every day.â
Apfel was born Iris Barrel in New York City on August 29, 1921. An only child, she wrote in her memoir that she began buying her own clothes when she was 12. She credits her grandmother with first igniting her creative spark by giving her fabric swatches to play with at family gatherings. âMy eyes popped,â she told Vogue. âShe said, âLook, you can play with all these scrapsâjust play and do whatever you want with them, and at the end of the day, if youâve had a good time and you like them, Iâll let you take home six pieces of your choice.â It was the entrance to my life in the textile world. I had the time of my life. It was so exciting for me to put colors together. It was my first dose of how it feels to be creative. I must have been about five years old.â
Her mother, Sayde âSydâ Barrel, who attended college and then law schoolâbut dropped out when she became pregnant with Irisâopened a boutique during the Great Depression. In her memoir, Apfel recalls Easter 1933, when her mother gave her $25 to assemble an outfit to wear in the Fifth Avenue Easter Parade. She found a dress for $12.95 and a pair of pumps for $3.95, which left her enough money for a straw bonnet, a light lunch, and transportation home. âMy mother approved my fashion sense,â she wrote. âMy father praised my financial skill.â Thus began her career as, in her words, a âblack belt shopper.â
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