Wendell Rodricks

Wendell Rodricks
Born India Goa
Nationality Indian
Occupation Fashion designer
Website
www.wendellrodricks.com

Wendell Rodricks is a prominent fashion designer based in the western Indian region of Goa. He has been listed among one of India's top ten designers. His work has involved a wide range of fashion—from lecturing on world costume history to fashion journalism and styling for international advertising campaigns. He is openly gay.[1]

In 2014, Government of India conferred upon him its fourth-highest civilian award the Padma Shri.[2]

Career

Rodricks started as a catering graduate but later moved to fashion designing.[3] He also acted in a film named Boom in 2003 and made an appearance in the television play True West in 2002. Also, he played a cameo as himself in the film Fashion.

Rodricks was the first India designer to be invited to IGEDO (the world's largest garment fair);[4] and the first Indian designer to open the Dubai Fashion Week.

Rodricks lives in Colvale village of North Goa and since 1993 he has gained the reputation for sending out creative collections for each fashion season. He has argued that it is a remarkable feat for a designer who despite living in a small village can still manage to direct the fashion trend for the country.

Rodricks has researched the theme of the history of the Goan costume for three years and interned at National Museum of Costume and Fashion in Lisbon and the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology, New York.

Rodricks has also argued that Indian clothes bear a strong influence from other parts of the globe. According to him, the Indian sari could be derived from Athenian dress, the West Chinese Kushans brought the jubba-coat and the pyjamas to India under Emperor Kanishka two thousand years ago, and the 'kurta' is a pure Moghul creation. He also argues that the Huns from Central Asia introduced the long cloaks and breeches-pyjamas. Arabs of the eighth and ninth centuries introduced skirts and robes.

The Goa-based fashion designer is critical of attempts to make beauty pageants "more in line with our culture" and what he has termed a xenophobic attitude to even simple fund-raising events which are "not part of our culture".

Rodricks recently designed the packaging of the four new flavors of POLO for Nestle India Ltd.

Personal

Wendell Rodericks is openly gay.[5] He is married to Jerome Marrel in a civil ceremony in Paris that recognises union of both sexes. He met Marrel in Oman, in 1988, thanks to a friend, who set them up. Rodericks credits marrel for his success as a fashion designer, in his biography, The Green Room. [6]

Awards

References

  1. Rao, R Raj; Sarma, Dibyajyoti (2008), Whistling in the Dark: Twenty-One Queer Interviews, SAGE Publications, p. xxx, ISBN 81-7829-921-6
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Padma Shri to Wendell Rodricks would help LGBT Community in India". IANS. Biharprabha News. Retrieved 27 January 2014.
  3. Wendell also went to St. Michael's High School in Mumbai. Sita Menon (July 18, 2003). "Fashion is not important: Wendell Rodricks". Rediff.com. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
  4. "Wendell Rodricks: Profile", Fashion Design Council of India, 2007, retrieved 17 March 2010
  5. Rituparna, Chatterjee (Sep 21, 2012). "Wendell Rodricks: I could take an outing, I don't think my family could". Ibnlive.com. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  6. Sathya, Saran (November 13, 2012). "He's quite an activist: Jerome Marrel on his partner, Wendell Rodricks". Firstpost. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  7. "Padma Awards Announced". Press Information Bureau, Ministry of Home Affairs. 25 January 2014. Retrieved 2014-01-26.

External links