
In a spread titled "Wild Things," Campbell is running with a cheetah, jumping rope with monkeys and riding a crocodile and an elephant.



Wearing leopard or zebra print, and being accompanied by animals, seems to be the easiest pigeonhole for black models.

Supermodels Then & Now
Before Naomi there was Naomi Sims who entered the fashion world in 1967. With her brown skin, gorgeous face and memorable walk, Sims quickly rose the ranks, appearing on the cover of Life magazine in 1969. She's often referred to as the first black supermodel.
Yale Joel, Time & Life Pictures / Getty Images
Although she had the potential for a long career, Sims gave up modeling to start her own wig business at the age of 24. Since then, Sims has written several books about beauty, modeling and success and launched her own cosmetics line, the Naomi Sims Collection. She died of cancer at the age of 61 in 2009.
Katy Winn, Corbis
In 1986, Kimora Lee Perkins's mother enrolled her uncommonly tall 11-year-old in modeling classes to boost her self-esteem. Just two years later, the girl we now know as Kimora Lee Simmons signed an exclusive modeling contract with Chanel in Paris becoming Karl Lagerfeld's muse by the age of 13.
Evan Agostini, Getty Images
After marrying hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons, Kimora got out of modeling and into the design business, taking over as head of Baby Phat. Divorced from Simmons, with whom she has two daughters, Kimora now runs Baby Phat and the KLS collection, in addition to starring in a reality show and writing books. She recently had a baby boy with Oscar-nominated actor Djimon Hounsou.
Ray Tamarra, Getty
Veronica Webb was just a 20-year-old design student when she was "discovered" on the streets of New York City in 1985. The Detroit-native soon became a fixture in magazines and on the runway, making history by becoming the first African American model to sign an exclusive cosmetics contract (Revlon).
Kevin Hatt, Corbis
Officially retired from the runway, Webb has seamlessly transitioned from fashion to the worlds of television, movies and book publishing. Most recently, Webb co-hosted the first season of Bravo's 'Tim Gunn's Guide to Style.' She lives in the Florida Keys with her husband and two daughters.
Corbis Outline
Beverly Johnson, a champion-swimmer-turned-supermodel, is said to have graced more than 500 magazine covers in her long and storied career. The most famous cover of all? Her history-making 1974 Vogue cover. She was the first black woman to grace the cover of the American version of the magazine. She has said that by the age of 23, she was making more than $100,000 a year modeling.
Dirck Halstead, Getty Images
Beverly Johnson, now a youthful fifty-something, has completely conquered the hair biz with her extremely successful wig line. She's also the co-host of TV Land's 'She's Got the Look,' a modeling competition show for women 40 and older.
Matt Sayles, AP
While there is a laundry list of supermodels who have ruled the scene since the '60s, there are only a handful of male models -- of any race -- who can actually claim "super" status. Tyson Beckford is one of them. In 1991, at the age of 21, the New York-native got his modeling break when an editor from The Source spotted the looker at a NYC park. From there, Beckford went on to be the spokesmodel for Ralph Lauren Polo. The rest is history...
Jordan Smith, Corbis
No longer a mainstay in magazines or on the runway, Tyson is staying relevant in the fashion world through his hosting gig on Bravo's 'Make Me A Supermodel.'
Dave Hogan, Getty Images
Claire Sulmers writes fashion articles for Black Voices' BV on Style. A seasoned journalist, her articles have been featured in Real Simple, Essence, Newsweek and Heart & Soul magazines. She also runs the style blog the Fashion Bomb, a daily destination for fashionistas of color.


Comments: (54)
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By: sharon jackson on 8/13/2009 12:47PM
Naomi Campbell pictures are just awesome! I congradulate her on doing a "outstanding" job with these photos.............so unique! Keep up the good work, because you're "worth" it!
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By: Sxxxysagittarius on 8/13/2009 2:42PM
No this ad doesnt offend me but what does offend me is this article...this is why blacks are so often held back because we spend too much time and effort sweating the small stuff to fight the big fight......BV please come better than this!!! there are real issues to be addressed right now but I see those arent being touched....my fellow black ppl come on now get with the times and learn to be smarter than they want us to be
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By: Jake Alexander on 8/13/2009 4:03PM
No, it's not offensive at all. It's no different than photographing a white woman in Alaska amid bears and moose and whatever else they've got there, or one in Wyoming where the buffalo roam. I mean, what's being suggested here? That Black women should NOT ever be photographed with African wildlife? What sense would that make? What point would it serve?
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By: Dimples on 8/13/2009 5:09PM
I agree. Some would complain if it were a white woman doing the "out of africa" theme. Can't please everybody. I think Naomi looks great, Iman looks great, and Africa looks great. Now let's keep it moving.....
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By: Amy McCoy on 8/17/2009 11:38AM
Black is usually the label given to individuals of mostly African descent but White is given to people of mostly European descent, therefore white women don't come from Alaska, most Alaskan natives are of Asian descent... but I do understand what you are saying, but also there is a lack of megafauna in Europe and photographing a White counterpart with native European animals would not have the impact of the prestigious animals of Africa. I do think we should all embrace our heritage and art/fasion/and photography all have to be taken with a grain of salt.
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By: Donna on 8/15/2009 5:01AM
How can photographs of a beautiful black woman in her beautiful homeland be considered offensive to black people? and I guess the reason this theme pops up every so often is because fashion editors know it's the ultimate beauty shot!
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By: Nad on 8/13/2009 11:01PM
Do you know how offensive this previous statement is ? In there "homeland"????
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By: Nad on 8/13/2009 11:04PM
Actually, Naomi Campbell's homeland is England....
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By: Ashlee on 8/13/2009 5:54PM
Jean Kilbourne has written and presented her profound and thoughtful pieces, The Beauty & The Beast of Advertising and Killing Us Softly: Advertising’s Image of Women.
She specifically points to the fact that women of color are often narrowly portrayed in ads as animalistic and/or sub-human. The insidiousness of a white supremacist hegemony that I see displayed in the posts above is truly tragic.
Just because a black woman is breaching high fashion doesn't make her placement there ground breaking or something to celebrate if it does nothing but perpetuate racist stereotypes.
This "small stuff" sends a wider message to everyone regardless of color, if the recent events with Gates and even Obama slanders have taught us nothing: that people of color and black people specifically, are so far removed from white or whiteness that they can never be considered human(e), therefore are in fact, the animals their (supposed) ancestors roamed with.
White women can and are portrayed from so many different angles that you cannot even intelligently compare them to black women in these instances? Why? Because white people have the freedom of multi-dimensionality that our media has chosen to marginalize dramatically the roles of people of color so that we are nothing but exotic animals for the fodder. We're either jezebels, sista-gurls, mammies, thugs, and I could go on. And before anyone mentions the Cosby's, the point is, being black, how many people claim to assume that you're a good dancer, must listen to hip-hop, and love fried chicken simply because of the color of your skin? Racist stereotypes indeed.
This is one part of the biggest whole but does not diminish its effect and the damage it does on the black psyche.
A little *critical thinking* can go along way. Because if we do not collectively start "sweating the small stuff," the fight against white supremacy and racism is futile.
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By: paul on 8/17/2009 12:18PM
So??? Do something about it and quit your constant whining.
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