
Interior designer and style icon Iris Apfel, known
for her over-the-top use of costume jewelry and accessories, has died at 102.
“With her big, round, black-rimmed glasses, bright red lipstick and short white hair, she stood
out at every fashion show she attended,” according to The Associated Press. “Her style was the
subject of museum exhibits and a documentary film, ‘Iris,’ directed by Albert Maysles.”
She loved being in the spotlight.
"The influential
interior designer loved chunky accessories, jazz, work and seized every opportunity that came her way, from prestigious art exhibitions to magazine covers, a cosmetic line, a documentary, a modeling
contract and a Barbie doll made in her image,” according to CNN.
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A self-declared “accidental
icon,” straight-talking Apfel modeled for Vogue in 2018. In 2019, aged 97, she landed a modeling contract with IMG, according toVogue.
Known for working on interior designs for Estée Lauder, Greta Garbo and nine U.S. presidents, Apfel was still making deals into her 90s. She struck a deal with home
goods company Hunter Douglas to appear in a commercial for window treatment designs, according toMarketing Daily.
“Inspired by
Apfel’s ritzy high-low outfits that clashed flea market finds with haute couture (‘I like to improvise; I always think I like to do things as though I’m playing jazz’), the
Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute exhibited 40 pieces from her personal collection in 2005,” according toThe New York Times, which ran a collection of photos of Apfel through the years with its obituary.
She appeared in another campaign for eBay to promote its watch
category just three years ago, according toMediaPost Agency Daily,
and ultra-low-cost Zenni celebrated her 100th birthday with a new line of frames, according toMarketing Daily.
“In more recent
years, Apfel launched her own makeup collection for Mac and a line of eyewear for Eyebobs, as well as a line of bright and bold accessories for the Home Shopping Network,” according to a Mac
Cosmetics blog post.
She was the very definition of anti-minimalist.
“She
believed, rather, in the virtues of muchness, of giving free rein to your inner extremism and letting your fashion freak flag fly,” according to The New York Times. "Above all, she
believed in the power of personal style, which she saw as another term for self-expression. Or self-creation.”
She called herself “the world’s oldest living
teenager.”
“I’m amazed at my life at this stage of the game,” she told The Times in
2019. “It is like living in a fairy tale.”