He's dressed Beyoncé: The influential African A-list stylist you've probably never heard of

26 March 2017 - 02:00 By ASPASIA KARRAS
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now

Jenke Ahmed Tailly comes sweeping into a Bree Street diner in Cape Town with the wind.

It is the same wind that has wrought havoc on the African Fashion International Fashion Week programme, forcing show cancellations.

Tailly is probably one of the biggest fashion authorities you haven't heard about. The modest man with an infectious smile dresses Kim Kardashian, who he met when he was Beyoncé's creative director.

Born in Ivory Coast to a Senegalese mother, Tailly is one of the most influential stylists working today.

story_article_left1

He started off studying business management because of his mom, but really wanted to go to the Parsons School of Design in New York.

A stint working as a model, which included a shoot with photographer Annie Leibovitz, sparked his passion for the creative process.

While working in retail for Donna Karan, he phoned a friend who was running the Berliner fashion magazine and secured the fashion editor position.

He was consulting for French fashion magazine L'Officiel when asked to work on its 90th anniversary cover.

His only proviso was that a woman of colour be on the cover — in its 90-year history, the magazine had only featured two women of colour on its cover.

He put Beyoncé on the cover in a shoot honouring all the queens of Africa.

"It was a huge success, but also controversial because in one shot I darkened her face, paying homage to the Mauritanian queens, which is their tradition, but some people thought it was blackface," said Tailly.

"I was so proud because the same cover was on all 48 editions across the world.

"I thought 'Holy s**t' when her mom phoned [and said they wanted me] to be [her] creative director!" he said.

The collaboration lasted three years, after which Tailly decided to start freelancing.

WATCH: A behind-the-scenes look at Beyoncé's L'Officiel cover shoot

 

Speaking about the underrepresentation of black beauty in the media, Tailly said: "Seeing [actress] Lupita [Nyong'o] on the cover of Essence told women you are beautiful in your own way and style. I think there is beauty in everyone, fashion gives you a chance to show it."

He tells how he met African Fashion International chairwoman Dr Precious Moloi-Motsepe in Paris at the Dior show.

"Everyone was delighted with her. She represents your country really well."

Asked how he began working with Kardashian, Tailly said her husband, rapper Kanye West, had set it up.

While he was working with Beyoncé, Kanye was collaborating with the singer's husband, music mogul JayZ. Kanye wanted Tailly to meet his wife.

"When I met her I thought: 'Wow, what an amazing woman.' Extremely nice, very well-spoken, exactly the opposite of [public] perception.

story_article_right2

"For Time's Top 100 Most Influential Gala, I put her in a dress Kanye hated - it was a Sophie Theallet dress. She cuts a dress like heaven. For the Council of Fashion Designers of America Awards, I convinced her to go with Narciso Rodriguez," said Tailly.

Asked how he gets to know and understand his clients, Tailly has one word: breakfast.

"You take them for breakfast first. Then you know the client in a natural way. You break the ice and get under their skin, then I know my subject and my collaborator," he explained.

About his trip to the country, he said: "I am still discovering South Africa, in a respectful way as a black African person who was lucky to see another world and culture.

"I have always felt that South Africa represents something really deep inside all of us.

"Africa is the true mother of the world. Let's represent her, from the Zulus in South Africa, to the mountains in Eritrea and the almost-blue black beauty of South Sudan, there is room for all the beauty in the world if we embrace it.

"Fashion can change the way we are. For me, fashion is not about clothes, it is about dreams, hope, acceptance and love. It has the power to make us feel good about ourselves."

subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now