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Canadian fashion brand under fire for appropriating Black Lives Matter message

Ports 1961 says that creative director Milan Vukmirovic was simply "exploring the urgency of love.". Victor VIRGILE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

It seems fashion is still grappling with the concept of cultural appropriation. Last week, Canadian luxury fashion brand Ports 1961 unveiled their men’s spring 2018 collection in Milan.

Among the sleek and graphic separates were two sweaters that have sparked an outcry from journalists and social media users alike. Specifically, they bore the slogans “Every Color Matters” and “Only Love Matters.”

Reaction to the sweaters and their manipulation of the Black Lives Matter message was swift and severe.

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In his runway review on Vogue.com, Nick Remsen noted: “A T-shirt that read “Only Love Matters,” a broadening of the term ‘Black Lives Matter,’ felt, to this writer, troublesome (a movement that big and important and personal to so many should perhaps not help to serve a company’s bottom line). Ditto for a clenched fist on a jumper that opened the show; there are subtler and more sensitive ways to deliver a message of resistance and fairness and acceptance.”

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“It was created in response to the crisis of racially-motivated police brutality — and with heartbreaking not-guilty verdicts like the one that came in the case of Philando Castille, it’s more important than ever,” wrote Alyssa Hardy. “People think Ports 1961 is not merely appropriating the movement, but they’re also attacking its message by broadening the term ‘Black Lives Matter’ to ‘Every Color Matters’ and ‘Only Love Matters.'”

Although the inspiration for the collection was “peace and love, but not in a hippy way,” according to creative director Milan Vukmirovic, many people thought that the appropriation of the Black Lives Matter slogan only served to delegitimize the movement and strip it of its grave modern significance.

https://twitter.com/_bethfuller/status/877909799786209280

https://twitter.com/lrpeoples/status/877647187345264640

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Although Ports 1961 has not made a public statement, the brand is eager to defend the designs of their creative director.

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“For the past several seasons, Milan Vukmirovic has been exploring the urgency of love and the importance of fraternity, unity and solidarity,” worldwide marketing director Giuseppe Panico said to Global News. “Our intention was to use the spotlight of a show to send out a message of tolerance, hope and love. We think that fashion reflects the world around us. In a time of challenge, fear and disillusion, it is the creative person’s role to try to deliver a message of peace and hope.”

Global News reached out to the Black Lives Matter chapter in Toronto but has yet to receive a response.

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