I Sent My Boyfriend to Chloë Sevigny’s Closet Sale

new york october 1996 american actress chloe sevigny poses for a photo at a party for the film trees lounge in october 1996 in new york city, new york photo by catherine mcganngetty images
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

I have a patient boyfriend, so I sent him to the Chloë Sevigny closet sale this past Sunday.

I didn’t give him any instructions, just a scribbled note with a list of brands: “Miu Miu, Yohji Yamamoto, Vivienne Westwood, Jean Paul Gaultier,” followed by some descriptions: “funny shapes and/or silhouettes, PLAID!, anything draped or ruffled or vaguely Victorian looking, hot in a weird way, potentially haunted nightgowns.”

He told me he understood the task at hand, though he didn't believe me when I tried to insist that this wasn't a test of our relationship. The night before, he prepared by looking through my copy of the 2015 Rizzoli book Chloë Sevigny, featuring personal photos, magazine editorials, portraits by Juergen Teller and polaroids of her recognizable ‘90s looks, that sits on my nightstand. “I’ve got this," he said, with the confidence of a man who has no idea what he's getting himself into.

nice, france may 13 actress chloe sevigny arrives ahead of the 72nd annual cannes film festival at nice airport on may 13, 2019 in nice, france photo by marc piaseckigc images
A photo Sevigny shared on her Instagram story ahead of her closet sale. The striped Miu Miu dress she’s wearing was listed for sale.Marc Piasecki

The sale of the century, as it was marketed by writer and sale co-organizer Liana Statenstein, took over my social media feed within minutes of being announced. It would take place at 676 Broadway in New York’s Noho and promised killer looks from the closet of a perpetual cool girl. On Instagram, Sevigny started sharing photos of herself in pieces that would be available: a plaid Versace jumper dress, a patchwork faux fur Supreme coat, a vintage apron dress with rick rack trim, and multiple pieces from her Opening Ceremony collections from 2015 and 2019. I loved it all.

The sale took place on Mother’s Day at noon, and people began lining up at 6am to get in. Model Gabrielle Richardson created a meme titled “so called ‘freethinkers’” with two open doors labeled “Mother’s day” and “Chloe Sevigny’s closet sale.” Only the latter had a crowd of people in front of it. On TikTok, commenters wrote things like, “I mean she is mother so it works either way” and “Well, she raised me.”

For many fashion fans, Sevigny’s style was formative. I grew up deeply insecure and painfully shy; I often felt trapped in myself, like I was screaming under my skin. And I’d spend hours on Tumblr at night as a teen, reblogging photos of Sevigny’s outfits. I remember I was struck by her confidence, the way she would style tiger print stockings with cocktail dresses and vintage sailor collar tops with cut-off denim shorts. She never looks like she's trying; she just looks like she's being. Adopting her eccentricity into my own wardrobe made me feel safe. It helped me crack the code for becoming who I felt I actually was. So–yeah—she was mother for that.

chloe sevigny at the sony village 7 theater in new york city, new york photo by ron galella, ltdron galella collection via getty images
A photo of Chloë Sevigny wearing tiger print stockings with a black cocktail dress; an image that is often highlighted in articles dissecting her iconic style.Ron Galella, Ltd.

Unfortunately, as much as I hate to admit it, I think her brand of ‘It’ girl has been dead for years. It’s hard not to care what anyone thinks when everyone has so many thoughts and so many places to share them. But the promise of feeling close to this style era of yore was enough to draw hundreds of fashion fanatics and Sevigny fangirls to the event. Secondhand shopping and archival fashion has never been more popular, and the people waiting in the enormous line outside the Noho space were the same ones scouring online resale sites for similar things. It’s not that they really wanted the particular items Sevigny has procured over the years. They wanted to buy her essence, even if it can’t be bottled.

On TikTok, those who braved the line, which snaked around the block twice, showed off their spoils. Niko Haagenson was the tenth person inside and scored a plaid Vivienne Westwood bag with large ribbons adorning the sides. His “favorite thing” about it, though, was a tampon that was left in the pocket. “I have a Chloë Sevigny tampon and I don’t think anyone else can say that.”

Gabrielle Richardson’s sale haul began with the Supreme faux fur coat Sevigny had posted on her story days before. In response to a comment asking if the clothes were actually hers, Richardson replied with a video of Sevigny wearing it in a 2015 Youtube interview about “How to Be a New Yorker.” In the caption she wrote a smug, “Yes :).”

On Statenstein’s own TikTok, she interviewed a girl named Christina in the stairway of the sale. When asked what she had bought, she held up a v-neck cable knit sweater and said, “I got a really good find. This was the sweater that she wore when she first flirted with her husband.” She didn’t mention the rarity of the piece, the label, or how she planned to wear it—only that it was meaningful to Sevingy and, thus, to her.

As for my boyfriend, he called me shortly after arriving at the sale at 9:30am. His voice was tinged with fear: "Tara, this line is really long.” He went quiet before starting to count aloud. I could hear his feet pacing as the sound of his headphone wire smacked against the phone. “There’s already one hundred people here, I think! What should I do?” Followed by, “I don’t know…do you really want the pieces she doesn’t even want to keep herself?”

I told my boyfriend that no, I guess I didn’t want the clothing Sevigny didn’t want anymore. But I also didn’t want the clothing she was keeping, either. What I wanted was something he couldn't bring me even if he waited hours, armed with my detailed instructions. And so I told him to get off the line for my sartorial mother so he could go celebrate his actual one a couple of blocks away at her apartment. Maybe the most Chloë Sevigny thing of all is to not do what hundreds of other New Yorkers are doing. Or maybe that's just what I'm telling myself to feel better about missing out.

You Might Also Like