Ernestine Marie Carter OBE (née Fantl; 10 October 1906 – 1 August 1983) was an American-born British museum curator, journalist, and fashion writer. She became hugely influential in her roles as women's editor, and later associate editor of The Sunday Times.
Ernestine Carter (OBE) | |
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![]() Ernestine Carter in 1974 (photo by Stanley Devon) | |
Born | Ernestine Marie Fantl 10 October 1906 Savannah, Georgia, United States |
Died | 1 August 1983 (aged 76) Chelsea, London, United Kingdom |
Education | Wellesley College |
Occupation | Museum curator, journalist, fashion editor |
Known for |
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Spouse | John Waynflete Carter |
Her obituary described her as not only influencing British taste, but also putting her authority behind emerging fashion talent, becoming: "not only the acknowledged leader among women's fashion writers but also created a reputation for British fashion at a time when this country was considered a desert".[1] In particular, she was instrumental in adding her authority to bolster the growing reputation of designers such as Mary Quant, Jean Muir, Gina Fratini and John Bates.[1]
Ernestine Marie Fantl was born on 10 October 1906 in Savannah, Georgia, USA, where she was brought up.[2] She studied modern and contemporary art and design at Wellesley College, Massachusetts, from which she graduated in 1927.[2] She started out as a curatorial assistant at the newly formed Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York City in 1932, and held the title Curator between 1935 and 1937.[2][3] As Ernestine M. Fantl, she curated these exhibitions at MOMA:
In 1936 she married a British antiquarian book dealer, John Waynflete Carter (1905-1975), and the Carters eventually moved to London.[2]
During the Second World War Carter was employed by the British Ministry of Information.[3] She worked on exhibitions and edited a book of photographs by Lee Miller titled Grim Glory: Pictures of Britain Under Fire (published London, 1941).[4] The book, which included a foreword by Edward R. Murrow, went into five printings. Later in the war, Carter went to work for the U.S. office of war information in London.[2]
Carter worked on the important design exhibition Britain Can Make It, organised by the Council of Industrial Design and held at the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1946.[2] That same year she became fashion editor for Harper's Bazaar.[5] Her first trip to Paris for the magazine was to report on Christian Dior's landmark New Look collection, launched 12 February 1947.[2][6] From 1952-54, she wrote her first newspaper column, a cookery section for The Observer, during which time she published a cookbook called Flash In The Pan (1953).[2]
In 1955, Carter began editing the women's page of The Sunday Times.[5] She became well known for the high standard of her journalism and writing, and eventually became associate editor of the paper in 1968.[2] Carter's editorial team, including Moira Keenan, was credited with having changed the face of fashion reporting in newspapers, presenting articles that emphasised excellence of design at all price levels.[7] Carter encouraged the emergence of London as a major centre of fashion in the 1960s.[2] Her intelligent prose and high standards led to her being recognised as an authoritative figure in the world of fashion.[2] At a time when widespread intellectual snobbery led to the dismissal of fashion as a subject not worthy of serious consideration, Carter argued that fashion was "surely no more frivolous than architecture, to which it is closely related".[2][8]
In 1962, Carter was appointed to the National Council for Diplomas in Art and Design, a post awarded by the Minister of Education.[9] She was appointed an OBE in 1964.[10] In the same year, she became a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.[11]
In 1966, she was the first individual fashion journalist to be invited to select an outfit for the Dress Of The Year, for which she chose a futuristic PVC and linen ensemble by Michèle Rosier, Young Jaeger and Simone Mirman.[12] Two years later, she was appointed associate editor of The Sunday Times, a role she held until her retirement from the paper in 1972.[1]
After her retirement in 1972, Ernestine Carter wrote several books on fashion history (see Bibliography section). She died on 1 August 1983 at her home in Chelsea, London.[2]
The Fashion Museum, Bath holds an important archive of more than 2000 fashion photographs from The Sunday Times during Carter's tenure there.[13] This is known both as the Ernestine Carter Collection and as The Sunday Times Fashion Archive.[14] The Fashion Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum both own garments from Carter's wardrobe.[2][15]
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