Harvey Sobel’s Brioni Coat

Harvey Sobel (1934-2014) was a well-known interior designer in the Greater Toronto Area and abroad. He was born in Toronto, but lived in Hamilton – one his favourite cities. He was known for his great love of antiques, French décor and fresh flowers – overall, his extravagant taste in all aspects of life.

Mark Woodley, Sobel’s contractor, donated the Brioni sports coat to the Ryerson Fashion Research Collection in 1997. The coat itself is in almost perfect condition except for some pilling under the arms and minor stains, and reveals a lot about Sobel’s character and refined mannerisms.

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FIGURE 1: Donation note from Mark Woodley (Harvey Sobel’s contractor). FRC1997.01.003

Below is a dialogue between Sobel and long time friend Sondi Goldblatt, whom he took on many of his exotic trips. Although the dialogue itself is made up, many of the facts and anecdotes are drawn from Sobel’s life. Beyond that, findings from a close study of the Brioni coat are also incorporated throughout the dialogue to reveal more about its historical and cultural biography.

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APRIL 13, 1985

Harvey: I had a bad dream last night – no, a horrible dream. I dreamt that I had to sell my sports coat.

Sondi: The one you’re wearing?

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FIGURE 2: Briono Coat interior neck label. Label Reads: Brioni – V. BARBARINI – 79-ROMA. FRC1997.01.001

Harvey: No, not this coat, the Brioni coat! You know, the wool coat – the camel-coloured one with the white and navy vertical stripes. The one I commissioned in Rome in 79. Bespoke! Do you know how many hours it takes to make one of these coats? Brioni only makes five or six of them a day! I’m certain it was on one of our trips together, Sondi. The shop on Via Barbarini! Ringing any bells?

FIGURE 3: Mr. Porter. “Brioni: Behind the Brand.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cfy8lQpJsJY (Accessed March 3, 2016).

Sondi: Harvey, I can’t keep up with your wardrobe investments.

Harvey: But that’s not even the worst part! I had to sell my coat to make money for food! I had no money for food, Sondi! And then, because I had no coat to wear, Peggy wouldn’t let me into the party! Peggy wouldn’t let ME into the party! She took me for some sort of panhandler – THE HOST!

Sondi: Now you know how Marx felt when they wouldn’t let him into the library!1

Harvey: Don’t make jokes, Sondi. The Brioni coat brings back a lot of memories from our trips through Europe.

Sondi: It’s just a coat, Harvey. Relax.

Harvey: It’s not just a coat! (Runs to get the coat from the closet)
It’s a representation of my life’s work. It’s a symbol of my love for all things beautiful and unique. It’s a…

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FIGURE 4: Camel, navy and cream wool coat with a four button closure and notch lapel, Brioni. FRC1997.01.001

Sondi: It’s, ah…kind of ugly.

Harvey: I’m going to wear it tonight – to the costume party.

Sondi: As what? An over-the-top gay man?

Harvey: No, as a gentleman. As a representation of fine Italian tailoring – the continental. Suave, sophisticated, cultured. A true vision of Italian style with a hint of the collegiate. A reinvention of sprezzatura.

Sondi: So…as Hamilton’s first over-the-top gay man?

Harvey: Sondi, this coat is the essence of me. It’s one of a kind. It’s singular. It’s priceless. It’s terminal, as Kopytoff might say.2 I could never sell this coat. Let’s see…I can wear my knitted V-neck with that spotted bowtie I purchased in Paris. Yes, that should work.

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FIGURE 5 & 6: Photograph of Harvey Sobel (far left) and friends at an art gallery costume party dated April 1985. FRC1997.01.001

Sondi: In a sea full of grey business suits, dare to be different.

Harvey: Exactly! It’s not about being gay. It’s not about being a man. It’s about experimenting. It’s about pushing the boundaries. It’s about breaking the “heterosexual assumption.”3 It’s about living this life to the fullest!4 What good did normal ever do anyone?

Sondi: I don’t think anyone assumes you’re heterosexual anymore, Harvey. You can cross that one off the list.

Harvey: Look here, Sondi. The last time I wore it I discovered a secret pocket within the right hip pocket.

Sondi: Interesting. I wonder what it’s for?

Harvey: Money, cigarettes, little black books?

Sondi: Wouldn’t exactly call yours “little.” You’re going to need a bigger pocket there, Harvey!

Harvey: Just wish the damned thing was a little lighter. This fabric is so thickly woven – almost a herringbone. I’ll be perspiring all evening under this horsehair canvas and silk inlay! There are already a few stains on the lining of the sleeves. Why tailors use white silk for lining is beyond me!

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FIGURE 7: Interior navy silk lining, Brioni. FRC1997.01.001

Sondi: Baffling. Four buttons – perplexing. The Italians usually like two or three.

Harvey: Yes, but why not four? Why not blue?

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FIGURE 8: FRC1997.01.001

Sondi: Is this another attempt at breaking hegemonic masculinities?5 Are your buttons contesting “exemplars of masculinity”?6 Shall I alert the press?

Harvey: I’m not trying to make a huge political statement, Sondi. I still look like a man. But we live in a society that still holds a “stigma against men’s interest in fashion” – I’m going to help change that. 7

Sondi: Dialling. “Hello, press?”

Harvey: And these buttonholes, Sondi! Oh, Sondi, they don’t make them like this anymore – Milanese, handmade buttonholes. Generations from now won’t even know this type of craftsmanship existed!

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FIGURE 9: Milanese buttonhole detail, Brioni. FRC1997.01.001

Sondi: The poor bastards.

Harvey: (Puts on the coat) Do you think I look muscular? I asked the tailor – a quaint little Fonticoli – to stick in a bit of shoulder padding to beefin’ me up.

Sondi: A modern day Adonis.

Harvey: It’s the tailor’s job to make the man look his best, you know?8 A little padding here, a little nip/tuck there. The great thing about buying bespoke is that they tailor the clothes to fit you – no conforming to Western size charts. That damn Quetelet ruined the world of fashion with his quantities!9 The average man? Hah!

Sondi: You a little self-conscious about your figure?

Harvey: Every man is, whether he likes to admit it or not. The Italian cut flatters me, Sondi. Perfectly cinched at the waist to give me enough definition.

Sondi: Classic case of non-economic commodity fetishism.10

Harvey: I beg your pardon?

Sondi: You’ve given that coat non-monetary exchange worth. You’ve masked its true cost with your ramblings on its ability to make you look and feel like your best self. You’ve “endowed it with a fetishlike ‘power’ that is unrelated to its true worth.”11

Harvey: Okay. But it doesn’t make me look too boxy, though? Does it, Sondi?

Sondi: No, Harvey. Even in a silk shirt with 1,000 carats of topaz buttons, you’re the perfect-looking gentleman.12 (He gets up to leave) Can’t wait to see you this evening!

Harvey: I’m thinking red bromeliads.

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END NOTES

  1.  Anthony Sullivan, “Karl Marx – Fashion and Capitalism,” in Thinking Through Fashion: A Guide to Key Theorists, eds. Agnes Rocamora and Anneke Smelik, 29. New York: I. B. Tauris, 2016.
  2. Igor Kopytoff, “The Cultural Biography of Things: Commoditization as Process,” in The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective, ed. Arjun Appadurai, 80-83 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986).
  3. Barry, Ben and Dylan Martin. “Gender Rebels: Inside the Wardrobe of Young Gay Men with Subversive Style.” (Ryerson University, 2015): 6.
  4. Kathy Renwald, “Renwald: Harvey Sobel was a Master of Magic,” The Hamilton Spectator, http://www.thespec.com/living-story/4646251-renwald-harvey-sobel-was-a-master-of-magic/ (accessed 5 March 2016).
  5. Denise N. Green and Susan B. Kaiser, “From Ephemeral to Everyday Costuming – Negotiations in Masculine Identities at the Burning Man Project,” Costume Society of America (2011): 9.
  6. Ibid., 9.
  7. Ben Barry and Dylan Martin, “Dapper Dudes: Young Men’s Fashion Consumption and Expressions of Masculinity,” Critical Studies in Men’s Fashion 2, 1 (2015): 12.
  8. Alison Matthews David, “Made to Measure? Tailoring and the ‘Normal’ Body in Nineteenth-Century France,” in Histories of the Normal and the Abnormal: Social and Cultural Histories of Norms and Normativity, ed. Waltraud Ernst, 150 (Kentucky: Routledge, 2006).
  9.  Ibid., 150.
  10.  Igor Kopytoff, “The Cultural Biography of Things: Commoditization as Process,” in The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective, ed. Arjun Appadurai, 83 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986).
  11. Ibid., 83.
  12.  Mary K. Nolan, “Passages: Harvey Sobel ‘Enjoyed the Best of Everything,’” The Hamilton Spectator, http://www.thespec.com/news-story/4642186-passages-harvey-sobel-enjoyed-the-best-of-everything-/ (accessed 5 March 2016).

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

Barry, Ben and Dylan Martin. “Dapper Dudes: Young Men’s Fashion Consumption    and Expressions of Masculinity.” Critical Studies in Men’s Fashion 2, 1 (2015): 5-21.

David, Alison Matthews. “Made to Measure? Tailoring and the ‘Normal’ Body in Nineteenth-Century France.” In Histories of the Normal and the Abnormal: Social and Cultural Histories of Norms and Normativity, edited by Waltraud     Ernst, 142-164. Kentucky: Routledge, 2006.

Green, Denise N. and Susan B. Kaiser. “From Ephermeal to Eeverday Costuming – Negotiations in Masculine Identities at the Burning Man Project.” Costume Society of America (2011): 1-22.

Kopytoff, Igor. “The Cultural Biography of Things: Commoditization as Process.” In The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective, edited by Arjun Appadurai, 64-91. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986.

Nolan, Mary K. “Passages: Harvey Sobel ‘Enjoyed the Best of Everything.’” The Hamilton Spectator. http://www.thespec.com/news-story/4642186-passages-harvey-sobel-enjoyed-the-best-of-everything-/ (accessed 5 March 2016).

Renwald, Kathy. “Renwald: Harvey Sobel was a Master of Magic.” The Hamilton Spectator. http://www.thespec.com/living-story/4646251-renwald-harvey-sobel-was-a-master-of-magic/ (accessed 5 March 2016).

Sullivan, Anthony. “Karl Marx – Fashion and Capitalism.” In Thinking Through Fashion: A Guide to Key Theorists, edited by Agnes Rocamora and Anneke   Smelik, 28-45. New York: I. B. Tauris, 2016.

“Trend Setter – Man of Exquisite Taste – Harvey Sobel Remembered.” The Bay Observer. http://bayobserver.ca/trend-setter-man-exquisite-taste-harvey- sobel-remembered/ (accessed 5 March 2016).

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