(Left: Harry Carr for i-D Magazine Right: HellYeahChantelleWinnie on Tumblr)
Some days ago, the tumblr fan site “Hell Yeah Chantelle Winnie” posted the above set of images, on the right, with the caption “I really wish people would stop doing this shit like This is not “art” you’re literally doing black face[.]”
The images quickly went viral, causing Chantelle Winnie to feel the need to speak out.
My response to this is probably not what a lot of people want but here it goes: every time someone wants fuller lips, or a bigger bum, or curly hair, or braids does Not mean our culture is being stolen. Have you ever stop to realize these things used to be ridiculed and now they’re loved and lusted over. No one wants to “steal” our look here. We’ve just stood so confidently in our own nappy hair and du-rags and big asses (or in this case, my skin) that now those who don’t have it love and lust after it. Just because a black girl wears blue contacts and long weave doesn’t mean she wants to be white and just because a white girl wears braids and gets lip injection doesn’t mean she wants to be black. The amount of mixed races in this world is living proof that we don’t want to be each other we’ve just gained a national love for each other. Why can’t we embrace that feeling of love? Why do we have to make it a hate crime? In a time when so much negative is happening, please don’t accuse those who are showing love and appreciation, of being hateful. It is very clear to me when someone is showing love and I appreciate these people recreating, loving and broadcasting something to the world that once upon a time I cried myself to sleep over.
Harlow, who blazed some major trails this year for models with vitiligo, by scoring campaigns for Desigual and Diesel, has spoken in the past about dealing with bullying over her condition.
“It was really hard growing up. I had to grow thick,” Winnie said in an interview, earlier this year. “People make fun of you and you have to learn how to deal or you break down. I’m not trying to break down so, I have to deal.”
As someone who’s been through a lot, it’s clear that Winnie is trying to keep things positive, but I do feel that her defense, though well-intentioned was misguided. She also posted this image to her Instagram account, after many of her followers started hurling epithets like “coon.”