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grace tee

2026

cotton t-shirt

grace jones built a presence that didn’t fit into any existing category. jamaican by birth, formed across new york, paris, and the studio 54 circuit, she moved through those worlds without being absorbed by any of them.

grace jones sits inside a particular kind of refusal.

born in spanish town, jamaica, raised in a strict pentecostal household, then thrown into the modeling industry in new york and paris in the early 1970s, she moved through systems designed to define her and came out holding something none of them could fully claim.

the body as form

angular, androgynous, geometric. jones worked with jean-paul goude to build an image that treated the body as a design object

sound as category collapse

disco, reggae, new wave, post-punk. none of those genres contain her. she moved between them without resolving the tension, which is exactly where the work lives.

jamaica

not background. not origin story. a specific set of textures, rhythm, resilience, a particular relationship to performance, that runs through everything she made.

gender as tool

jones didn’t perform androgyny as a statement. she used it the way an architect uses negative space to make the structure more precise

the image before the song

she came through modeling first, yves saint laurent, kenzo, and helmut newton. by the time the music arrived, she already understood that the visual is part of the argument.

the grace tee doesn’t illustrate any of this. it points toward a way of operating, building something that holds its form across categories, contexts, and decades.

grace jones bloodlight and bami

grace jones: bloodlight and bami

2017. directed by sophie fiennes. a documentary following jones on tour and in jamaica.

slave to the rhythm

slave to the rhythm

1985. produced by trevor horn. the record that consolidated what she’d been building, sound, image, and structure pulled into one thing.