Patricia Michaels (born 1966, New Mexico) is a Native American fashion designer who works under the fashion label PM Waterlily. She is a citizen of the Pueblo of Taos.[1]
Michaels was the first Native American to appear on the popular fashion design-focused television series, Project Runway. A finalist on season 11,[1] she returned to compete in Project Runway All Stars.[5] She has exhibited across the United States and internationally, including in South Africa and New Zealand.[6]
Early life and education
Patricia Michaels was born in 1966[7] in New Mexico to Eddie Michaels (Polish-American) and Juanita Turley (Taos Pueblo).[8] Her stepfather, Frank Turley, was a blacksmith.[8] She grew up on Canyon Road in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where her parents owned an art gallery.[6] She often visited Taos Pueblo and, as a teenager, moved there to live with her maternal grandparents,[3] Ben and Manuelita Marcus.[8]
In 2001, Michaels traveled to Milan, Italy, where she apprenticed with a tailor.[6] She then moved to New York with her two young children.[6]
Fashion career
Through PM Waterlily, Michaels creates ready-to-wear fashion, couture fashion, jewelry, and accessories.[1] She specializes in hand-painted silks.[1]
At the 2010 Santa Fe Indian Market, Michaels won best of the textiles classification with a contemporary design which was seen as "a new Native chic."[9] This local breakthrough paved the way for her 2013 participation in Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in New York.[9]
In March 2015, Michaels took part in the Stars of Project Runway fashion show during Fashion Week El Paseo.[12] In September 2016, Michaels held a fashion show of her work at New York Fashion Week.[13] Some of Michaels' designs were featured in the 2017 SWAIA Haute Couture Fashion Show in August 2017.[14] Later that year, she was one of ten designers to represent the United States at World Fashion Week, Paris 2017.[14]
In 2023, Michaels designed a dress, titled "Tantoo in Flight", for Canadian actress Tantoo Cardinal to wear to the premiere of Killers of the Flower Moon at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival.[2][15][16] The dress, which was inspired by men's eagle headdresses, featured eagle feathers on the skirt.[17] Cardinal wore the dress again for the Santa Fe Indian Market Gala in August of that year.[18] In April 2024, Michaels took part in the first SWAIA Native Fashion Week in Santa Fe.[1][17][19]
Project Runway
Michaels became the first Native American designer to participate in Project Runway, an Emmy Award-winning reality television in which diverse fashion designers compete against each other.[1] She competed in Project Runway season 11, which aired in 2013, and was runner-up.
In 2014, Michaels returned to the show for Project Runway All Stars.[3][5] Her appearance on the show helped expose new audiences to Native American fashion.[9]
Visual art
In 2019, Deb Haaland (Laguna Pueblo), New Mexico's first Native congresswoman, now Secretary of the Interior, commissioned Michaels to design a chair as part of the "A Seat at the Table" art installation at the Edward Kennedy Institute in Massachusetts.[20]
In 2020, Michaels took part in a project organized by Naomi Campbell, in which artists created face masks to raise money for charities.[20]
In 2023, Michaels received New Mexico's Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts.[4] The Museum of Indian Arts and Culture named Michaels a Living Treasure in 2024.[1]
Personal life
She married painter Tony Abeyta (Navajo), whom she divorced in 2008.[8] The couple has two children: a son, Gabriel Abeyta, and a daughter, Margeaux Abeyta,[23] both of whom are also artists.[4] After living in Santa Fe for years, she moved back to Taos Pueblo in 2023,[4] where she lives with her partner James Duran.[3]