The supermodel Iman has opened up about her grief over the loss of her husband, David Bowie, saying she refuses to refer to him as “late”.
Appearing on the cover of January’s issue of Vogue magazine, the model, activist and entrepreneur talks about her enduring love for the musician, who died of cancer in 2016. The couple were married in 1992.
“He is not my ‘late husband’. He is my husband,” she says before discussing how the couple managed to retain their independent identities while together.
“I don’t mind at all being referred to as ‘David Bowie’s wife’,” she adds. “But I always remind people that I existed before I met him. And he was also very particular. He never introduced me by saying, ‘Meet my wife.’ He’d always say, ‘Meet Iman, my wife.’ So we both already had our own identity. We were separate together.”
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Iman also reveals how difficult it was to find space to grieve privately after Bowie’s death and says it was frustrating when people said they shared her pain. “It was too much,” she says. “Too much.
“We lived a very private life, and suddenly it felt like there was a target on mine and my daughter’s head. It got to the point where we had to leave our home [in New York City] because the public were always at the front door. Which I admire. I get it.
[ Inside David Bowie’s $17m Manhattan apartmentOpens in new window ]
“But there was a point where it was, like, ‘Okay, go home now.’ You had people who would take your picture, sell it and then come to you and say, ‘I feel your pain.’ And I’m, like, ‘No, bitch, you don’t feel my pain. Get away from me.’”
The 67-year-old, who was one of the most sought-after fashion models of the 1970s and 1980s, also talks about changing the fashion industry and resisting ageing cliches.
[ Iman on life after David Bowie: ‘In the woods I could cry and release the grief’Opens in new window ]
She calls the obsession with youth a “very western mentality” and says: “I come from Africa – we celebrate getting older. A friend was telling me there’s been a rise in cosmetic surgery, all because [people] have been looking at themselves in Zoom meetings.
“I’m, like, ‘If you are worried about that, just put the camera up [so it’s tilted down on your face], for God’s sake!’ This really is a mentality rooted in the West. For me it has never been a problem.”
She says the urge to champion black models galvanised her decision to become an executive producer on the six-part YouTube documentary series Supreme Models. “I wanted to show not only the trials and tribulations but also the joy and celebration.” – Guardian