Cleveland
was born in New York City in 1950 to Johnny Johnston, a jazz saxophonist of
Irish and Swedish ancestry, and Lady Bird Cleveland, an artist of
African-American, Native-American and Irish-Scottish ancestry. Her parents
separated when she was young and she was raised by her mother in Harlem. She
studied performing arts at Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School and studied design
at New York's High School of Art and Design and hoped to become a fashion
designer. Some of her earliest photographs as a youngster were taken by Carl
Van Vechten, who was among her mother's coterie of artist friends.
Cleveland's
career as a model began in 1966 when she was on a subway platform with a friend
en route to class and was noticed by the assistant to Carrie Donovan, fashion
editor at Vogue. Donovan, impressed by Cleveland's fashionable clothing,
invited her to tour the Vogue offices and the magazine subsequently published a
feature on her as an up-and-coming young designer. The article led to her being
approached by Ebony which asked Cleveland if she would perform as model for its
Fashion Fair national runway tour. Cleveland agreed and decided she would place
her aspirations to be a designer on hold and try her luck as a fashion model.
Following
her tour with Ebony, in which she experienced acts of violent racism in the
Southern United States, Cleveland caught the attention of designers such as
Jacques Tiffeau and Stephen Burrows. At age 18, she was signed to Wilhelmina
Models after designer Oleg Cassini initially recommended her to Eileen Ford.
Cleveland has stated that Ford had rejected her based on her race.
Soon she
was meeting and working with many of the fashion industry's top enterprising
people of the era, including Diana Vreeland and being photographed by Irving
Penn, Steven Meisel, Richard Avedon, Christopher Makos, and Andy Warhol and briefly became a muse to Salvador Dalí.[8]
She made her first appearance as a fashion model in American Vogue in June
1970, photographed by Berry Berenson and
the same year, appeared in the very first issue of Essence magazine. Despite
her early success, Cleveland grew disillusioned with America and what she
perceived to be its racist attitudes towards black models. She relocated to
Paris by suggestion of fashion illustrator Antonio Lopez in 1971 and soon
became a house model for Karl Lagerfeld, who was the main designer at Chloé.
Cleveland vowed not to return to the United States until a black model appeared
on the American cover of Vogue. During the 1970s, she modeled for designers
such as Valentino, Oscar de la Renta, Yves Saint Laurent, Thierry Mugler, Diane
von Furstenberg and Christian Dior. With Karen Bjornson, Anjelica Huston, Alva
Chinn, Elsa Peretti, and Pat Ast, among others, she became one of Halston's
favoured troupe of models, nicknamed the Halstonettes.
The
pinnacle of her success in Europe was her participation in the November 28,
1973 Battle of Versailles Fashion Show; a gala event initially conceived as a
publicity stunt and fundraiser held at Théâtre Gabriel for the then-dilapidated
Palace of Versailles. The gala, which pitted five French designers: Yves Saint
Laurent, Hubert de Givenchy, Pierre Cardin, Emanuel Ungaro and Christian Dior's
Marc Bohan, against five American designers: Bill Blass, Oscar de la Renta,
Anne Klein, Halston and Stephen Burrows in a fashion showdown. The event became
an international fashion extravaganza with style writers and society
columnists, wealthy socialites, royalty, tycoons and politicians in attendance.
Cleveland was one of 36 models to walk the runway for the event. Of the 36
models, ten were black, an unprecedented number for the era.The gala later was
chronicled in the 2015 Pulitzer Prize winning The Battle of Versailles: The
Night American Fashion Stumbled into the Spotlight and Made History by Robin
Givhan.
After
Beverly Johnson became the first black model to appear on the cover of American
Vogue in August 1974, Cleveland returned to the United States and continued her
modeling career. From the early to late 1970s, she appeared on the covers of:
Vanity Fair, Interview, Essence, Harper's, Cosmopolitan, Women’s Wear Daily,
L'Officiel, The Sunday Times Magazine, GQ, Vogue Paris, W, and Elle.
During the
mid to late 1970s, she became a fixture at New York City's exclusive
discothèque Studio 54, often in the company of friends Halston, Jerry Hall,
Grace Jones, Andy Warhol and Sterling St. Jacques.
After
raising two children, Cleveland sporadically returned to modeling. In 1995, she
started her own modeling agency in Milan. In 2003, Cleveland and her daughter
Anna walked for Chanel at Paris Fashion Week. In 2010, she appeared in the
documentary Ultrasuede, In Search of Halston and the same year appeared as a
guest judge on the reality television series and interactive competition
America's Next Top Model. In 2012, she appeared in two more fashion
documentaries, Versailles ’73: American Runway Revolution and Timothy Greenfield-Sanders'
About Face: Supermodels Then and Now.[9] In 2013, she made an appearance on The
Face, a modeling-themed reality television show hosted by model Naomi Campbell and in 2013 appeared in an ad campaign for MAC
Cosmetics with models Jerry Hall and Marisa Berenson that was launched in
dedication of fashion illustrator Antonio Lopez, who died of AIDS in 1987 and
who had been close friends with all three models and instrumental in their
early careers.
In 2014,
she walked the runway for Moschino's Spring Collection in Milan and appeared on
the cover of Numéro Russia, shot and styled by Tom Ford. In 2015, she returned
to New York Fashion Week to walk the runway for Zac Posen, who also hired her
and her daughter Anna to showcase his June 2015 resort collection, appeared in
Vogue Japan and appeared in an ad campaign for Barneys New York. Both Cleveland
and her daughter Anna were chosen for a 2015 ad campaign for French
multinational high fashion house Lanvin. In 2016, she walked the runway for
H&M during Paris Fashion Week and appeared on the cover of Vogue Italia
with her family. She also appeared in editorials for Harper's Bazaar Japan and
Vogue Spain. In February 2019, at age 68, she walked the runway for Hellessy
and Naeem Khan at New York Fashion Week and in March of the same year, she
walked the runway (along with early peers Beverly Johnson and Grace Jones) at
Paris Fashion Week for Tommy Hilfiger and Zendaya.
Personal
life
In 1978,
Cleveland married male model Martin Snaric; the two later divorced.[9] In 1982
she married Dutch former model and fashion photographer Paul van Ravenstein,
with whom she has two children, Noel van Ravenstein (born in 1984) and Anna
Cleveland van Ravenstein (born 1989), who has also become a fashion model.[8]
She lives with her husband near Morristown, New Jersey.
In 2016,
she wrote Walking with the Muses: A Memoir, covering her early life in Harlem
and her career in the fashion industry. The book was published by Atria
Publishing Group, 37 Ink, Simon & Schuster. In addition to her writing,
running her business, and public appearances, Cleveland is also on a quest to
get her mother, Ladybird Cleveland's art accepted into the Smithsonian Institution.Cleveland
is a devotee of Gurumayi Chidvilasananda, the current spiritual head of the
Siddha Yoga path.
In March
2019, days after walking the runway for Tommy Hilfiger show at Paris Fashion
Week, Cleveland was rushed to the American Hospital of Paris after falling ill.
She underwent emergency surgery on March 23 after French doctors discovered she
had colon cancer.[24] Shortly after her surgery, Cleveland's husband Paul
announced that Cleveland did not have enough medical insurance to cover the
cost of the surgery. A public donation page was established by van Ravenstein
on a crowdfunding platform to help pay for Cleveland's medical expenses.
Donations were made from many individuals within the fashion industry,
including designers Anna Sui, Kim Jones, Marc Jacobs, Zac Posen, Thierry
Mugler, Kimora Lee Simmons and Elsa Peretti; models Carla Bruni, Helena
Christensen, Marisa Berenson, Marpessa Hennink and Lineisy Montero;
photographers Inez van Lamsweerde, Vinoodh Matadin, Roxanne Lowit and Steven
Klein; stylist and fashion journalist Katie Grand; and businesswoman and DJ
Marjorie Gubelmann. In September 2019, following further treatment, she
returned to the runway, walking for the 2020 Spring Season shows for designers
Nicole Miller and Chiara Boni.
Supermodel
As early as
1980, the term "supermodel" was used to describe Cleveland. Former
American editor-at-large for Vogue magazine André Leon Talley wrote, "She
is the all-time superstar model" in an article for the June 1980 issue of
Ebony magazine. Talley referred to Cleveland as "The first black
supermodel, the Josephine Baker of the international runways" in his 2003
published memoir A.L.T.: A Memoir. Vogue contributor Tina Isaac-Goizé referred
to Cleveland as a "supermodel" in a 2015 article about Cleveland's
daughter Anna.
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