Name Patrick Kelly | Role Fashion designer | |
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Education Parsons School of Design, Jackson State University |
Patrick kelly his work
Patrick Kelly (September 24, 1954 – January 1, 1990) was an American fashion designer. Born in Vicksburg, Mississippi, Kelly studied art at Jackson State University and then attended Parsons School of Design. While in New York Kelly Struggled to find steady employment. To support himself he had many jobs that included a part time job at Baskin Robbins while continuing to sell his own designs. After receiving advice from his friend and super model Pat Cleveland and an anonymous one-way ticket he moved to Paris in 1979. Once there Kelly was promptly hired as a costume designer for a nightclub called Le Palace. In a small apartment which he shared with a model he continued to sell his own creations and even homemade chicken dinners to make ends meet. While living in Atlanta at age 18 Kelly sold reworked, recycled clothes and served as an unpaid window-dresser at Yves Saint Laurent. YSL chairman Pierre Bergé personally sponsored Kelly in 1988 to form the Paris-based womenswear fashion house Patrick Kelly Paris. Kelly achieved his greatest commercial success in the late 1980s and in 1988 Kelly became both the first American and the first person of color to be admitted as a member of the Chambre syndicale du prêt-à-porter des couturiers et des créateurs de mode. Kelly died at age 35 on New Year's Day, 1990. Originally Kelly's causes of death were reported to be bone marrow disease and a brain tumor, but the actual cause of death is now acknowledged to be complications of AIDS.
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Working from Paris, Kelly produced collections for five years, beginning in 1985 and continuing until his death in 1990. After receiving financial backing from the U.S. based fashion conglomerate Warnaco in July, 1987, Kelly was able to hire a staff and eventually achieve wholesale sales of US $7.2 million per year. Kelly's designs were sold in upscale retailers including Henri Bendel, Bergdorf Goodman and Bloomingdale's and were worn by celebrities including Isabella Rossellini, Bette Davis, Cicely Tyson and Grace Jones. Kelly's designs frequently incorporated bright colors, were often embellished with ribbons and buttons and suggested a sense of whimsy and joy while sometimes addressing difficult issues of race. This was pointed out by the giving his audience a tiny brown doll with molded black hair that could be most accurately described as a "pickaninny". Kelly also used motifs such as watermelon and the golliwog. He was known to walk the runway in baggy overalls and used a large spray paint heart as the background to his fashion shows.

Kelly was described as an extremely hard working individual and gained a reputation for demanding his staff match is work ethic. He was also an advocate for models of color and often made a point to include them in his work.

In 2004, The Brooklyn Museum presented Patrick Kelly: A Retrospective, a show featuring more than sixty Kelly designs. In 2014, the Philadelphia Museum of Art presented the exhibition Patrick Kelly: Runway of Love.

In September 2016, Jackson State University presented Patrick Kelly: From Mississippi to New York to Paris and Back, featuring twenty-five of Kelly's designs which were gifted to JSU's H.T. Sampson Archives(Henry Sampson (inventor)). JSU Gallery Director/Curator collaborated with Philadelphia Museum of Art and the owners of Kelly’s estate, Bill and Bjorn Amelan. The Kelly exhibition opening was student centered and included a fashion show. Mayor George Flaggs Jr. who was Kelly’s former Vicksburg, Mississippi and JSU classmate also attended and spoke. The exhibition traveled to Vicksburg, Patrick Kelly's hometown in the Spring of 2017. The two day exhibition featured the piece twenty-five collection. Kelly's family, friends, former classmates, and neighbors all attended. Jackson State University students, Vicksburg High students, and Warren Central High School students all provided a fashion show. An additional 250 plus pieces from Kelly’s collection were gifted in the summer of 2017 by the owners of the Kelly estate, again thanks to the collaboration of Philadelphia Museum of Art and JSU.