Backstage: An Unfurling of the JPC | Beauty & Fashion

Talk
A group of women wearing brightly colored dresses for a fashion show

Ebony Fashion Fair producer/director Eunice Walker Johnson, in gown by Hanae Mori Couture, poses with models attired in creations by several of the more than 100 designers featured in the traveling show, August 1995. Photograph by unknown. Johnson Publishing Company Archive. Courtesy J. Paul Getty Trust and Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Nov 7, 2024

10am PST

Online

This is a past event.

About

Throughout its 75-year history, the Johnson Publishing Company (JPC) showcased the gamut of makeup, hair, skincare, fashion design, and style in Black culture. Elaborate photographic spreads captured the allure and grace of actresses such as Lena Horne and Dorothy Dandridge, runway shows featured models Pat Cleveland, Richard Roundtree, and Von Gretchen Shepard, and the images captivated audiences with the latest American and European fashion trends. This conversation with Getty archivist Skyla S. Hearn, archivist Camille Lawrence, and historian Dr. Rikki Byrd explores the JPC's coverage of beauty and fashion in magazines like Ebony and JET and the company's overall contribution to the beauty and fashion industries.

The Johnson Publishing Company Archive is owned by Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) and J. Paul Getty Trust. In 2019, a consortium made up of the Ford Foundation, J. Paul Getty Trust, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and Smithsonian Institution acquired the JPC Archive. In 2022, ownership was transferred to NMAAHC and the J. Paul Getty Trust, with a commitment to make the archive available to the public by 2029.

The conversation will be available on the Getty Research Institute YouTube channel following the event.

Visit the Getty Research Institute's Exhibitions and Events page for more free programs.

Speaker Bios

  1. Skyla S. Hearn

    Archivist, photographer, and writer

    Hearn is dedicated to supporting communities marginally reflected in broader historical contexts; centering community archival practices; and committed to amplifying documentation created from first-person perspectives of unsung individuals and groups. Hearn contributes to the ongoing preservation of Black cultural heritage and is a proud Chicagoan.

  2. Dr. Rikki Byrd

    Writer, educator, and curator

    Byrd is the founder of Black Fashion Archive and the co-founder of the Fashion and Race Syllabus. She is currently assistant professor of visual culture studies at the University of Texas at Austin. She spends her time between Austin and Chicago.

  3. Camille Lawrence

    Founder of the Black Beauty Archive

    The mission of the Black Beauty Archive is to preserve the rich history of Black Beauty Culture. Lawrence's background as an art historian and beauty practitioner informs her approach to archival work, which focuses on the innovations of artistic expression across the African Diaspora.