A name that's still synonymous with dandyism is Beau Brummel, the 19th-century British gentleman of society who spent a mere five hours putting together his outfit every day. Brummel, explains Valerie Steele, director and chief curator at the Museum at FIT, "was known for wearing very simple navy jackets; really impeccable, clean white linen; a carefully tied cravat — things like that, but very much focusing on tailoring, cleanliness, simplicity, which is really the beginning of the new movement in menswear away from decoration and color and adornment and toward sobriety and a focus on tailoring and fine material. So the rise of the dandy is really associated with the rise of the gentleman and is sometimes called the ‘great masculine renunciation’ of giving up fancy clothes." Cartoonists like George Cruikshank loved nothing more than to poke fun at the burgeoning fashion movement, "depicting [dandies] being laced into corsetry so tight they fainted."
Steele cites the writer Jules Amédée Barbey d’Aurevilly, who defined the style in 1859, writing “the dandy is the black prince of elegance ... indifferent to the horse he mounts, to the women that he greets, to the man that he approaches, and to whom he stares for a moment before acknowledging him and wearing written on his forehead in English this insolent inscription ‘what is there in common between you and me?’" (Steele points out that since this was a French writer, the reference to an English inscription indicates snobbery.) There is, she says, "this idea that the dandy is distinguishing himself from other people. There’s this kind of arrogance, boredom, and the idea that he’s really only interested in judging himself, and he doesn’t admit that anyone has the right to judge him."
As the dandy evolved, notables like Oscar Wilde became associated with the style. "At first he was more foppish with his aesthetic style," Steele notes, with "pseudo-18th-century breeches and long hair and ruffled collars, but then he gives all that up and goes into a much more hypermasculine [mode], with a dark suit. That’s where the dandy becomes associated with homosexuality. The idea that it’s a masquerade of masculinity but it’s done just a little bit too well. The dandy [became] a very important queer archetype, but that really emerges in Oscar Wilde’s era, around the late 19th century."
Today plenty of men own up to considering themselves modern-day dandies, but the concept goes far beyond just being well-dressed. Rather, it's an ethos of self-presentation. "I've always loved the term," says Chris Benz, the creative director of Bill Blass. "When you want to feel a little outrageous, and menswear can be a little more subtle. It's an easy platform to just be like, 'Oh, I'm doing a little dandy moment.'" Street-style star Nick Wooster is a tad more nonchalant, saying, "My style is 'whatever's closest.' I just get dressed; I can't describe it. Peaky Blinders meets Miss Selfridge. A little masculine and a little feminine. I think that's an okay place to be." And Waris Ahluwalia, the jewelry designer who's known for his louche take on the look — think a shirt unbuttoned well past the breastbone — sums up the appeal of the lifestyle as follows: "The hope is that if one looks like a gentleman, one may be inclined to behave like a gentleman."
Today the notion of men dressing well has become increasingly disentangled from sexuality. Johnny Weir, with his elaborate headgear, takes the dandy look to decorative, Liberace-esque extremes, but Kanye West also has dandy influences, favoring dramatic, Baudelaire-worthy black cape coats, crisp monochrome white getups, and, of course, the occasional Céline blouse. As for whether it takes him a Brummel-esque five hours to get ready, only his mirror knows for sure.
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