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Gia Robles Levy: “It’s a powerful thing to be open and honest”

Gia Robles Levy, has been actively sharing her transition journey through social media since she ‘came out’ as trans in 2020. Still only 21 today, she talks to Kym Nelson, writer and comedian, about her struggles to find her identity, why she no longer has to suppress her sass and, what she really thinks about comedians who make trans jokes.

Vincent van Den Dries

 
You describe yourself as a influencer, how are you influencing people?
Gia: “I have a story to tell about my transgender journey and I feel I have a mission and a purpose to educate. I’m still learning new things about the transition process and I want to share these findings because it’s not easy if you’re not in the LGBTQ+ community. You can’t  just use Google to find the answers. That’s why I try and tell my story from my own experience. Essentially, I’m expressing my vulnerability; I love doing that. As a result, people always comment on how brave I am to open up and be so vocal about my story. The feedback is empowering. It feels good to know you are inspiring people. It can be quite a heavy topic, so I do use humour sometimes when talking about my transition.”

Vincent Van den Dries


Talking of humour…how do you feel about comedians such as Ricky Gervais making jokes about transgenders?
Gia: “I feel that he’s not in a position or privilege to joke about the trans community because they are our topics. It’s our struggle. These are the type of things people commit suicide over. I mean how can he go on stage as a privileged straight man and mock us. It’s disgusting. You get people saying; “Oh you don’t have a sense of humour, it’s comedy.” No! If a transwoman had made that joke then it’s funny because she understands, she went through it. It’s like white people using the ‘N’ word. You can’t say that, you’re not allowed to say that word. They don’t know the struggles for black people.”

Vincent Van den Dries

How would your influence bring more understanding about the trans gender community?
Gia: “I would love to go to schools and educate children and teenagers about this. At school I was bullied and there was a lot of gay shaming. I didn’t know what gay was, while I was being called a faggot on the playground. I would love to stand up in front of a class now and give lessons from my perspective as a trans woman.”

Vincent van Den Dries

“I wish I had discovered the possibilities and opportunities sooner, then I wouldn’t have had to struggle this hard to find my identity.”

Vincent Van den Dries

Did you struggle with your sexuality?
Gia: “I did from the age of 15, when I started questioning my sexuality after I realised I was attracted to men, but I could fall in love with women. But at the age of 15 you don’t really know what love is and that is why I was stuck. Then I started coming out as gay but it was a confusing time because I was still struggling with the sexuality part and still questioning and asking myself why am I not interested in men who are interested in me? And I was questioning why can I not be a regular homosexual like all the other guys? I was also really scared to go to bed with someone, I couldn’t imagine giving myself intimately to another guy and I couldn’t understand why I was thinking like that until I was 20.”

Vincent Van den Dries

Was there anyone you could talk to about your conflicted feelings?
Gia: “I thought I was falling in love with a female friend, who is my soul mate. I was able to talk about my feelings for her, with her. She was asking me questions like; “Why do you feel like that?” She felt it too but her opinion was that sometimes you don’t have to be romantic with someone, sometimes friendship is good enough. So I thought about that and also discussed my confusion about my sexuality with other friends.”

Vincent Van den Dries

When did you start to make sense of your identity?
Gia: “Because I didn’t understand what I was feeling I talked more with people who knew about sexuality and gender identity. Then a friend suggested that I might be gay because I was attracted to men but also bi-romantic (when you’re romantically attracted to two different gender identities) and gender-fluid (being flexible with the sex with which people identify). Suddenly, I was relieved that I had a label for myself, that I could finally have some structure in my head about who I was. While I was telling people about how relieved I was about having these labels, another friend asked me; “Have you ever thought about being trans?” During that conversation I suddenly understood why I wasn’t attracted to gay men, because I felt like a straight woman.”


“It got to the point where I had to give myself a label. I know that many people dislike labelling themselves, but for me, knowing that I could do so to remove these question marks was really reassuring.”

Vincent Van den Dries

How long did it take for you to ‘come out’ as trans?
Gia: “It took me 2 years to ‘come out’ as gay but when I discovered I was trans, it took me just two weeks to tell everyone because I didn’t want this to be a secret. And whether they were comfortable with it or not, I decided that was not my problem, it was theirs.”


What was your family’s reaction to changing your gender?

Gia: “They were so supportive! Their attitude has always been about whatever makes me happy, makes them happy. So I’m really lucky. Obviously you expect questions, but I was surprised by some of them. For example, my half-brother, who is 16 years old, asked, “Isn’t the transition really expensive?” Then after that he was like; “Fine, I guess I’ll have a sister then!” My older brother (25) was more curious to learn what transgender meant, because he had no idea.”

“I began to see that the gender with which I was expressing myself with was more fitting than the gender I was born with.”

When did you start transitioning?
Gia: “As soon as I discovered I was trans, a week later I joined the Ghent hospital’s waiting list to get myself on hormones. Four months later I made the decision to go private, since I didn’t want to wait for the hormones. My Mum was really supportive and got me private therapy as soon as possible since I was still in puberty and I wanted to prevent it. I was like a ticking time bomb. I was already seeing hairs on my chest, so I couldn’t afford to wait another year.”

Vincent Van den Dries

What was the process with the hormones?
Gia: “Once you get the all-clear from the psychologist you can start hormones. But before that I had to freeze my sperm because I found out from a friend -not from the medical profession-, that hormone therapy makes you sterile. So although the assistance provided to transgender persons in Belgium is excellent, you really have to conduct your own research, because I learned more from my peers than from the medical community.I took estrogen in gel form which is like a hand sanitiser which you rub into your arm and then the hormones go straight into your bloodstream.”

Did the transition affect your mental health?
Gia: “It did when I started using testosterone blockers which helps with breast growth but they have to go through your digestive system which makes them very strong and dangerous and can mess with your head. That’s why you hear trans women say they feel mentally unstable. I have always been secure in myself, strong, stable and confident but one month on these hormones, coupled with a heartbreak, made me crash down. I was feeling depressed. Ever since then I have not felt myself. I’m about 50 percent of where I used to be.”


Has it been an issue being trans within your community?
Gia: “I feel lucky to have so many friends from the deeper queer scene as opposed to the superficial queer scene, which we have in Belgium. So, for me and my friends we don’t always feel safe in queer parties because there is still discrimination. For example from white gays to black gays and from gay people to trans women. In the superficial queer scene you can be gay, lesbian or trans. But in the queer scene I’m in now you can be trans feminine, trans non-binary, binary trans, people with different genders, different pronouns and different sexualities. So much freer and it makes me feel amazing to be around people who truly understand. But I do see how other people struggle and how lucky I am.”

Do you feel people don’t see you as normal?
Gia: “All the time. I meet men who look at me as if I’m an experiment. They have an interest in me, but they want to keep me a secret because they’re ashamed to be with a transgender woman. That’s why they’re never going to commit to someone like me.”

Vincent Van den Dries

How do you think we can change attitudes towards transgenders?
Gia: “Change is starting to happen. I see thatwith images and reactions changing towards my community within mainstream media. It’s certainly changed since that film the Hangover 2 which portrayed trans woman as being freaks. I remember watching a scene where the men go to Bangkok and they look horrified to see a trans woman as her towel drops off and say; “What the fxxk was that?” I remember watching that movie and I thought they had that reaction because they were looking at a freak – a woman who had surgery to put a penis on her. It’s scenes like that that creates an impression as trans women being freaks. Now we have more understanding about trans woman who are being portrayed more positively in films, such as Laverne Cox and Indya Adrianna Moore. They are invading this world with their presence and steering the transgender community towards this radical change.”

Are you happy with your body now?
Gia: “I am very happy with my body, as you can see from the photos!”

“It’s gender affirming for me to be able to walk on the street with a sass that I don’t have to supress anymore”


How do you want people to approach you?

Gia: “The most respectful thing you can do is ask a person’s pronoun. It’s very well known in the queer world that this is a very respected question rather than assuming. I’m very happy to tell people that I am she/her, it means you address someone in the right way.”

Vincent Van den Dries

What question do you hate to be asked?
Gia: “Tell me your worst traits. I mean why would I want to think about those things? Are they trying to make me feel insecure?”

Do you have a song that is your personal anthem?
Gia: “ ’Break free’ by Ariana Grande. She’s my inspiration. It’s such an empowering song.”

What advice would you give to others who want to make the transition like you?
Gia: “Don’t hide yourself for anyone. Look around, see what situation you are (for instance, if you’re in a safe space to come out as trans, do you have people you can trust in?) and only invest energy into people where you feel the energy is being reciprocated.”

Who are you becoming?
Gia: “I’d like to say a better version of myself, but it’s not true. I’m not a better version than I was last year. But I have evolved and I have learned. I guess I’m becoming more authentic.”

Vincent Van den Dries

Find out more about Gia on her Instagram page @giarobleslevy. She will also be selling
T-shirts on behalf of clothing brand Essentiel Antwerp at Antwerp Pride from 10th to 15th August.

Concept: Ninette Murk

Photography: Vincent Van den Dries

Make-up: @emmacatry
Light: @janmaes_
Assistant on set: @annieksnoeijs

vincentvandendries.com

thespacebrussels.com

IG @vincentvandendries

Interview: Kym Nelson
IG @mindful_atplay
Twitter: @KymNelson

Categories
Blog

Ninette Murk – Making The World A Better Place: Here’s How!

Quite a few people are curious about how a fashion journalist could become a social activist, so we decided to publish the biography of BFBW’s founder Ninette Murk. Take a drink and a comfortable seat and enjoy!

Photo: Charlie De Keersmaecker

Ninette Murk (born January 22nd, 1954 in Haarlem, The Netherlands) is a social activist, writer, consultant, curator and networker focusing on projects that make the world a better place through the use of pop culture (social media, fashion, art, photography…). She lives in Antwerp, Belgium

Early life
Ninette Murk was born the daughter of a flower bulb merchant and a librarian and grew up surrounded by beauty, books and music. As a 6 year old girl she wanted to become a doctor in Africa, until she discovered she couldn’t stand the sight of blood. Her favourite hobbies were reading and writing. She lived in the small village of Hillegom, which soon became too small for her and at 16 she moved to Bergen op Zoom, near the southern border of The Netherlands. She got bored with school around this period too, as she felt the classical system slowed her down. Her next years were spent learning-by-doing, reading a lot, going to concerts and enjoying the life of a young woman in the Seventies. In 1976 her son Mischa was born from a relationship with a Welsh traveler and two years later she left for Antwerp, Belgium with her son, to live with her new boyfriend (and later first husband).

First career in fashion
In Antwerp she met a lot of fledgling young fashion designers, make-up artists and stylists and she also honed her craft as a buyer and reseller of secondhand and vintage clothes. She married her first husband in 1982 and her daughter Nona was born 2 years later. The relationship didn’t go well, so in 1988 she left her husband and went to live on her own with her two children. Her first years as a divorced mother were lonely and she filled her days writing diaries and short stories. One day a well-known Belgian singer read some of her work and advised her to ‘do something’ with her talent for language. She started to work for free for avantgarde publications such as Blaazuit, Sheap and Pulp and soon after applied for a job as text editor at a new monthly Belgian magazine called Feeling. After doing some trial stories she got accepted and graduated from correcting other people’s texts to working as a journalist herself within the year. First she wrote about general subjects, but soon she focused on young Belgian and international creative talents and as most of those people were her friends, she could come up with exclusive stories. Next to Feeling she started to write for Belgian and international magazines- including a few in Japan, as the Antwerp designers were very popular there in the Nineties. Next to writing stories, Ninette also started to organise fashion and commercial shoots, went to Paris Fashion Week every season (both for women and men) and was busy and quite happy for a while, until 9/11 happened in NYC and she started to wonder if this was the kind of work she wanted to keep doing until her retirement. The answer was a firm no.

NInette with Belgian fashion designer Walter Van Beirendonck

Second life as a HIV/AIDS activist
Ninette was fashion director at newspaper Het Volk in the Nineties, when her assistant Peter Verhelst (who was in his early Forties), passed away from AIDS. She couldn’t understand how this was still possible in a developed country and started to ask her children and other teens what they knew about HIV/AIDS and safe sex. The results were shocking: they didn’t know and they didn’t care. From that moment on, Ninette decided to use her contacts in the fashion and media worlds to set up projects that would educate young people about HIV/AIDS and the need for safe sex and why this was so important. Her first project, supported by Evisu (a Japanese denim brand), was Designers Do Denim (2001), for which she motivated all the important Belgian fashion designers, some musicians and even Ministers of State to customise a piece of denim, that were later exhibited in museums in Antwerp and Utrecht (The Netherlands) and then auctioned for HIV/AIDS research by the Institute for Tropical Medicine in Antwerp. This project was a huge success and even journalist Suzy Menkes came to see an exhibition of the denim pieces in Antwerp and wrote about it for The New York Times. Soon after, with the help of her second husband Peke, who she married in 2008, Ninette founded Designers against AIDS (DAA) as a project of her NGO Beauty without Irony (BWI) and started to look for partners and fashion brands to help her get the message out. After a few hard years (the world was not ready for this kind of awareness, as they felt AIDS was either over or ‘just’ a gay or African disease) she proposed a collection designed and presented by international celebrities to global fashion retailer H&M in Stockholm and the result was Fashion against AIDS, that ran for 5 years and raised over 13 million euros for HIV/AIDS NGO’s working with young people. With their part of the proceeds, DAA founded an education center in 2010, where international students learned how to create and implement cool HIV prevention campaigns. This work was done until 2015, when Ninette became seriously ill – first with Cauda Equina Syndrome and 2 years later a spinal stroke, meaning that she couldn’t lead her center anymore, or had the energy to find partners and sponsors. Everything grounded to a halt.

Ninette with DAA’s creative director Javier Barcala and burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese at the launch of the first Fashion against AIDS collection in Paris (2009)

Third career in social activism through beauty
Because Ninette spent a lot of time in and out of hospitals and in bed, she had plenty of time to think about next steps. She was about to retire, except that was the last thing she wanted, as she felt there was still a lot to do when it came to making the world a better place and she didn’t want to let her experience go to waste. She decided to focus on beauty (as in nature, love, compassion, discovering other cultures…not lipsticks) to lift people up and remind them to do their bit to preserve the beauty that’s still left in the world as well as they can. “If you love it, you will protect it”. Through her NGO Beauty without Irony she started several projects, the most important of which is Beauty for a Better World (BFBW), that was founded in March 2020 as an antidote to the feelings of helplessness and despair due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The concept of BFBW, which is an ongoing project as so many young people are anxious due to what’s happening in the world, is to ask people -ranging from small children to well known celebrities- to send in a photo, illustration or other work that they made and that reflects their idea of real beauty. Usually contributors also send in a quote or even a full story about true beauty. The works are exhibited in an online gallery and there are plans for expos in real life and a book, with the proceeds going to charity. In 2025 Ninette still is not back to full health physically, but busier than ever. From 2021 -2023 she (together with her NGO BWI and other experienced people from her network) also consulted for the nr 1 educational/charity app in the world: the Global Goals app, created by Samsung together with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). The app has around 380 million users and 11 million daily views and is translated in 83 different languages (May 2023). Ninette contacted well-known people from her network and asked them to give some practical tips -to do with one of the Global Goals- for young people, tips that they can easily apply in their daily life, with friends, at school and/or in their community. All fees for the consultancy were donated to NGO Beauty without Irony, to help with their work. She now focuses on Beauty for a Better World and on her online social activism projects together with her friend Katharine Hamnett about voting, sustainability, Gaza and more, culminating in videos, guerrilla projections on state buildings and articles in media such as V Magazine. Her story is not over yet!

Ninette didn’t become a doctor in Africa, but she hopes that her work will still have a positive impact on the world.

‘Misty Morning’ by Ninette Murk

Jobs & Projects (more or less in reverse order)

  • Founder and creative director of Beauty for a Better World, an art project meant to uplift people through the power of real beauty (www.beautyforabetterworld.org) (1) (56)
  • Consultant and Board Member of GWAND Sustainable fashion in Switzerland (www.gwand.org) (2)
  • Writer for i-D Magazine (3), Vogue Italia and SCHON Magazine.
  • Consultant for the Samsung x UNDP Global Goals app (www.samsungglobalgoals.com)
  • Founder/curator of ‘Beauty without Irony’ (4), a project/exposition/catalogue-magazine of fresh, creative talents of all ages. BWI had their first exposition at the Super! triennal for art, fashion & design in Hasselt (Sept 9th – Nov 13th) (8). Following that were 2 expos called Air/Port: the first in Essaouira Morocco (2013)(5) and the second in Antwerp (2014) (6). In 2016 BWI organised the expo Beauty Overdose in Sterckshof Castle in Deurne, Belgium (7). (www.beautywithoutirony.com)
‘If You Can Dream It You Must Do It’ by Mark Titchner
  • European agent for photographer Sean Black (Miami) (9)
  • Creative director of Be Carbon Neutral, based in New York City (http://www.eliminatecarbon.com/)
  • Consultant for 100 Years Lee Cooper (artist scouting and follow-up of the artworks and auction) 2009. (10) (11)
  • Creator of collaborations for DAA with Marc Jacobs (12) (13), Essentiel Antwerp (14), Eastpak (15) (16), Delvaux (17), Playboy Design, JBC (18) (19) (20)(21) and more.
  • Founder and creative director of Pillows of Hope, artisan pillowcases made by women in India, Morocco, Bali and Nigeria.
  • Jury member for various fashion related competitions on Arts Thread (www.artsthread.com) (22) (23)
  • Director of the International HIV/AIDS Awareness Education Center (24) (36), that opened December 1st in 2009 in Deurne/Antwerp.
  • Driving force behind ‘Fashion against AIDS’ the annual collection of DAA and mass fashion retailer H&M that was sold in almost 1000 stores in 30 countries (25). The first edition (2008)featured artists such as Timbaland (26), Rihanna (27), Tokio Hotel (28), Ziggy Marley (29), Rufus Wainwright, Good Charlotte and Katharine Hamnett (30), for the 2nd FAA in 2009 artists were Dita Von Teese (31), Katy Perry (32), Róisín Murphy, Estelle (33), Cyndi Lauper (34), Pharrell Williams/N.E.R.D (35), Robyn, Yoko Ono, Yelle, Moby, Katharine Hamnett, Dangerous Muse and Tokio Hotel. In total there were 5 collections and 13 million euros were raised for 4 HIV prevention orgs working with youth.
  • Founder/director of non-profit fashion/music range ‘Designers against AIDS’: celebrity designed T-shirts (55), Thai/Hmong fabric shoulder bags, skirts and coin purses, bracelets and other items that are sold worldwide to get HIV/AIDS back into the media and to inform youth in the industrialised world about the importance of safe sex (January ’05). www.designersagainstaids.com and www;designersagainstaids.be (archive site). (37)
  • Founder/director of MintRed (38), an international PR, Press and Consultancy Agency for designers, photographers, fashion brands and enterprises, with the aim to get international media exposure (2003- 2010).
  • Editor-in-Chief of the Antwerp part of Cool Capitals (39), a tourism website designed to promote European cities as destinations for lifestyle lovers from the US (2007-2011).
  • PR worldwide for Stimuli Magazine (September 07- 2012) (40)
  • Consultant for the Arnhem Mode Biennale (June 07), scouting emerging and famous designers and international press. (41)
  • Co-founder of TolerAntwerpen, a platform of organisations and individuals in Belgium who want to celebrate life and beauty, instead of being scared and voting extreme right wing. This is done by organising cheap & fun parties and other events for a very broad audience, both age- and culture-wise (June ’04). (42)
  • Creative director of the HIV prevention T-shirt project for Café d’Anvers, where famous designers such as Dirk Bikkembergs and Francesco Costa for Calvin Klein create T-shirts to be sold to fund aids-research of the King Leopold Institute of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp (August ’04) (43)
  • Contributor to Dutch (RIP; now called ZOO Magazine), Fashion Director of Flemish daily newspaper Het Volk, Stimuli Magazine (Antwerp/London), Clear Magazine (USA), Sportswear International (Milan), Clam (France), Composite, High Fashion, Ryuko-Tsushin, Atmosphere and Studio Voice (all in Japan), BLVD (Holland), Sleazenation and Dazed & Confused (UK), Style in Progress/ X-Ray (Austria), Quest, The Berliner, Kodex and Kodexonline (Germany), i-D Magazine (UK), V Magazine (US), Glamour, Feeling, Flair, Glam’it, Weekend-Knack, Zone 03/ and newspaper De Morgen (all in Belgium); Belgian correspondent for WGSN and WGSN-edu (professional fashion website); researching subjects and producing interviews and videos for Sputnik NYC (cultural intelligence scouting): fashion, travel, beauty, interiors, lifestyle, trends.
  • Head of the editorial office Benelux for kodex (www.kodexonline.com -starting June ’04- 2008)
  • Fashion Director and International Communications Director of Forecast in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (June ’04).
  • European and US PR for china lane (2002-2005). (44)
  • PR Michaël Verheyden (2002-2005). (45)
  • PR Nathalie Verlinden (2002-2005). (46)
  • PR support Alexandra Mein (2002-2005). (47)
  • Paris Fashion Week PR for Belgian fashion collective NU.
  • Co-founder of the Flanders Fashion Institute in Antwerp (’97) (48)
  • Director of ‘Guerilla’, an non-profit events bureau/booking/modelling agency promoting underground lifestyle (music, fashion, art) (49)
  • European agent for photographers Dino Dinco (Los Angeles), Jason Orton (London) and Juan Brenner (New York City)- (1995-1997)
  • Belgian fashion consultant for Amsterdam International Fashion Week (2004-2006) (50)
  • Editor & international PR for the limited edition Visionfragments fashion calendars (editions 02 and 03). (www.visionfragments.be (51) (52)
  • Fashion & Beauty Director Sheap (Belgian lifestyle magazine for young people) -August ’01- January ’03.
  • Fashion consultant for Levi’s Premium Lines (Red and LVC)
  • PR for Belgium, Holland and Germany for ‘Umbro by Kim Jones’ (August ’03-January ’06) (53) (54)
  • PR & consultancy for the American fashion label ‘Feuerwasser’, with the aim of promoting the brand in Europe.
  • Editor-in-Chief/Fashion & Beauty Director Sputnik Magazine (Belgian lifestyle magazine written in English, to promote young -mainly Belgian- design & photography talent internationally April ’99- October ’00).
  • Fashion writer/editor/consultant, specialised in young, creative designers (mainly from Belgium and Holland, but also others)
  • Curator for an exhibition at Galérie 213 (Marion de Beaupré), where 5 Belgian fashion designers were linked to 5 international photographers (’05).
  • Press and PR for Boa Connections, where famous & new young talents from the worlds of fashion, music and art meet for events at unusual locations in Antwerp.
  • Press texts & other assistance to Lieve Van Gorp, Bernhard Willhelm, Anna Heylen, Christoph Broich, Maria Intscher and other Belgian designers
  • Communications Director for Bernhard Willhelm
  • Communications Director for ‘no:play’
  • Creative Projects Consultant for events/expositions with young, creative talents for Value Retail/Maasmechelen Village (upmarket outlet stores) and their other European villages (London, Paris, Barcelona and Madrid), from spring ’01-december ’03.
  • Creative Consultant ‘Reflect’-Belgium (charity project for Unicef with British photographer Alistair Morisson) (55)
  • Production work (from concept to completed fashion shoots & everything in between) Example project: the Levi’s Red & LVC catalogues for F/W O3/04, shot entirely in Antwerp, with models cast & locations secured by us.
  • Researcher VTM-national TV for ‘Medialaan 1’-fashion-related subjects for items featuring Belgian celebrities (’97).
  • Fashion consultancy for advertising agencies, avantgarde fashion shops and various brands (link between creative fashion designers and commercial brands), for example the fashion.com/Motorola v.phone event that took place on 30/3/00 in Brussels and that featured 8 young designers from Belgium and Holland and an event for H&M featuring customised clothes by Belgian fashion school graduates.
  • Fashion & Beauty Director Pulp Magazine (January ’97 – March ’99)
  • Fashion & Beauty Editor OutSoon/Café Cool (music & fashion mag & website) (until June ’00)
  • Developing concepts for the ‘Mode d’Anvers’ events in Antwerp club Café d’Anvers, with the aim of mixing (mainly Belgian) fashion with music
  • Consultant for Hortensia de Hutten/Paris, to scout Belgian and Dutch creative designers with a commercial feel to take to fairs in New York City in February & September of each year. Also PR for Workshop (fair for young, creative designers in Paris) and Workshop Déco. (March ’99-May’ 00)
  • Model scouting -scouted top model Hannelore Knuts for Vision by Steff and Amélie Lens (now a well known DJ)
  • International promotion of young designers, photographers, stylists, make-up artists, etc.
  • Teacher Press & Communication at the IFM (Institut Français de la Mode) in Paris
  • Consultant to Mr. Didier Grumbach of the Chambre Syndicale du Prêt-à-Porter des Couturiers et des Créateurs de Mode (Paris) regarding new, creative designers
  • Organized benefit fashion auction ‘Designers Do Denim’ (that took place on May 27th ’01 in Antwerp) with more than 50 Belgian designers and other creative personalities who customized a pair of Evisu jeans (website: www.designersdodenim.com) (56) and was fashion consultant for an event with 3 young fashion designers/students who customized pieces of the commercial collections for H&M (Hennes) for two events in September ’01.
Top model Alek Wek in a waistcoat customised by Martin Margiela for Designers Do Denim. Photo: Michel Comte for DUTCH Magazine
  1. https://schonmagazine.com/beauty-for-a-better-world/
  2. https://gwand.org/en/about/advisory-board/
  3. https://i-d.vice.com/en_uk/article/d3a7nw/martin-margiela-legacy-andam-jean-paul-gaultier-demna-gvasalia-antwerp-retrospective
  4. https://i-d.vice.com/en_uk/article/59bgva/beauty-without-irony-is-the-charity-using-fashion-to-make-the-world-a-better-place (5
  5. https://aestheticamagazine.com/airport-biennale-of-international-art-in-essaouira/
  6. https://www.beautywithoutirony.com/airport-2014-antwerp-is-ready-to-fly/
  7. https://fleursdumal.nl/mag/beauty-overdose-beauty-without-irony-in-kasteel-sterckshof-anwerpen
  8. https://ashadedviewonfashion.com/2005/09/04/beauty_without_/
  9. https://art.as.miami.edu/gallery/online-gallery/sean-black/index.html
  10. https://www.dazeddigital.com/fashion/article/1186/1/lee-cooper-100-years-project
  11. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhPPsoqaFk4
  12. https://fashionunited.uk/v1/design/marc-jacobs-for-daa/20110307707
  13. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dq-QVy0e8nw
  14. https://www.essentiel-antwerp.com/be_en/blog/essentielxdaa#
  15. https://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/2016/11/24/eastpak-artist-studio/
  16. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-NE2BxCn3s
  17. https://www.designersagainstaids.be/news/item/exclusive_delvaux_against_aids_handmade_leather_love_pouch_for_sale_online_only_from_today
  18. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HSFnoVhoh1Y
  19. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dSdEhuosVUo
  20. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TX239rTRR_E
  21. https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=982104601812477
  22. https://www.artsthread.com/competitions/daa-x-arts-thread-young-creatives-against-aids-contest/
  23. https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/proud-judge-artsthread-global-design-graduate-show/
  24. https://www.flickr.com/photos/designersagainstaids/sets/72157624207311835/
  25. https://www.marieclaire.co.uk/news/fashion-news/h-m-s-star-studded-fashion-against-aids-campaign-216769
  26. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvgJXAwixwY
    27.https://nitrolicious.com/2008/01/15/hm-x-rihanna-fight-against-aids-january-31/
  27. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TuESQzyrO2g
  28. https://celebrity-fashion.net/star-power-behind-fashion-against-aids-campaign/
  29. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Designers_Against_Aids
  30. Photo of Dita Von Teese, DAA’s creative director Javier Barcala and DAA founder Ninette Murk at the campaign launch at the VIP Room in Paris, France.
  31. http://www.mtv.com/news/2575724/katy-perry-tokio-hotel-join-hm-for-fashion-against-aids/
  32. https://www.gettyimages.be/fotos/and-estelle-unveil-the-fashion-against-aids-collection
  33. https://www.shedoesthecity.com/fashion_against_aids_h_m_and_the_stars_make_philanthropy_stylish/
  34. https://www.ihiphop.com/hm-collabs-with-nerd-and-estelle-for-fashion-against-aids-collection/
  35. https://www.aidsactioneurope.org/sites/default/files/1535-0_0.pdf
  36. https://www.notjustalabel.com/designers-against-aids
  37. https://mintredpr.wordpress.com/
  38. https://www.facebook.com/coolcapitals/
  39. https://issuu.com/stimulimagazine/docs/preview
  40. https://www.trendalert.nl/artikel/119322-arnhem-mode-biennale-2007
  41. https://fashionunited.de/nachrichten/mode/antwerpener-modeszene-wird-politisch-aktiv/2004070728438 (
  42. https://www.partyscene.nl/headlines/88623/design-shirts-in-cafe-anvers
  43. https://www.studiokompa.com/en/portfolio_page/china-lane/
  44. https://databank.kunsten.be/en/podium/makers/ent:dkb:ppl:1912066/michael-verheyden/
  45. https://nathalieverlinden.com/
  46. https://theculturetrip.com/europe/belgium/articles/alexandra-leyre-mein-finding-beauty-in-lifes-emotional-contrasts/
  47. https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flanders_Fashion_Institute
    49.
  48. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amsterdam_Fashion_Week
  49. https://www.visionfragments.be/2002-2/
  50. https://www.visionfragments.be/2003-2/
  51. https://ashadedviewonfashion.com/2005/12/02/kai_junemann_fo/
  52. https://www.dazeddigital.com/fashion/article/5692/1/designers-against-aids
  53. http://www.hopperprojects.com/exhibitions/reflect-for-unicef/
  54. https://www.nytimes.com/2001/05/29/style/IHT-designers-do-denim.html
  55. https://www.vogue.co.uk/article/designers-against-aids
  56. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBLVsxQnckY (interview by Sara Sozzani Maino, Vogue Italia)