When British singer and actor
Harry Styles became the first man to be featured on the cover of
Vogue magazine in December 2020, Reed was tapped by
Anna Wintour to design an outfit for the feature article: a tailored suit with a hoopskirt dress. Styles' high-profile appearance in Reed's dress on the cover of
Vogue sparked both controversy and celebration for the ways that the garment challenges
gender norms in clothing. In 2021, Reed was awarded "Breakthrough Designer" in
GQ magazine's annual "Men of the Year" awards. That year, Reed collaborated with
Dolce & Gabbana, dressing the
supermodel Iman for the 2021
Met Gala and accompanying her to the event in a matching outfit. His
gender-neutral clothing collection was modeled at the first-ever gender-neutral
London Fashion Week that September, and he also launched a line of jewelry with Missoma and collaborated with
MAC cosmetics to issue the
Harris Reed x MAC Collection. In 2022, Reed's work was selected for inclusion at the
Victoria and Albert Museum in London as part of the museum's first-ever exhibition dedicated to menswear,
Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear. In the exhibit, an outfit that Reed designed and modeled in 2017 is juxtaposed with the clothing featured in a 1753 portrait of French writer
Jacques Cazotte, as painted by French portraitist
Jean-Baptiste Perronneau. Besides frequent collaborator Harry Styles, many other notable individuals have worn Reed's designs, including
Beyoncé,
Nicki Minaj,
Solange Knowles,
Adele,
Selena Gomez,
Shakira,
Miley Cyrus,
Ezra Miller,
Troye Sivan,
Olly Alexander,
Tommy Dorfman, and
Emma Watson. His work has been featured in
Vogue,
GQ,
The New York Times,
The New Yorker,
Vanity Fair,
Marie Claire,
Elle, Cosmopolitan, and ''
Harper's Bazaar,'' among other publications. Reed cites many wide-ranging influences, including
Belgian fashion designer
Ann Demeulemeester, British aristocrat
Henry Paget, British performer
Lindsay Kemp, British singer
David Bowie, the American rock band the
New York Dolls,
Romanticism, and
glam rock. ==References==