When I watched Uli’s collection an image unfolded of a woman, ultimately the dream of every hard-working woman I know, lounging on a tropical beach daydreaming. She looked out at her surroundings and wondered what it would be like to be on an African jungle safari. She gazed at the vast sand around her, whose color and texture is embodied in these nude color garments.
Glimpses of tiger teeth or claw-like shells peered out of the sand.She studied the ridges of the palm trees and saw the stripes of a white tiger. She looked out at the sea and sky and imagined it were an African sky. (Notice this is the first African American model she uses.) Then comes the sun and like a woman proudly radiating her beauty we see the first swimsuit whose rays vibrate into animal stripes. The sun begins to set and there is a violet sky as smooth and dark as a cougar. (Again, her model chose is perfect.) Back to a tiger-like bark dress (It is this erratic color jump that most annoyed the judges)
for a final transition to the green leaves of a palm tree where the woman dives into the lush jungle, swallowing both her and our imagination. It was a dream within a dream within a dream, the metaphor of our existence.
And the winner is…
I have watched the entire 3rd season now and though my heart feels heavy, I understand why the judges chose Jeffery instead of Uli, for the same reason that co-host Tim Gunn and Harvard professors use SAT words, because the rest of "us" don't. What makes the elite of any community, art, intellectual or otherwise is their ability to separate themselves from the masses. When the message seems too clear, too commercial the elite apparently feel less special and potentially obsolete—the masses themselves trusting their own opinion, not the elite’s means someone’s out of a job or at least perceives themselves to be.
It was this that the judges respected; it was this—dark, complicated, perplexing—that qualified him for elite fashion design status. It’s the emperor has no clothes meets high fashion.
Uli, on the other hand, appeared too humble for the judges, too transparently easy. Her simple but evocative message was so obvious that it irritated the judges who constantly mocked her. They mocked her for being inspired by nature. She lived in