Tuesday 7 June 2011

Christian Dior



Christian Dior was the master of control and release. Anchoring garments and volume to understructures was one of his many fortes. The combination of restriction with areas of sensuous volume is something that I particularly hope to achieve in my work - Dior is a masterclass.

References:

img1
http://emariam.tumblr.com/post/1426263234
img2 http://www.bluetramontana.com/2010/02/book-clifford-coffin-photographs-from.html

Monday 6 June 2011

Vivienne Westwood



I am including Westwood in my designer index no so much because her aesthetic resonates with mine but because her design practice does. I heard from someone who worked with her that a very large component of her designing process and construction process is done by tweaking on the stand. I find it necessary to do the same thing. Though I think flat pattern-making extremely important and enjoyable, I find every little change I make I need to toile - that physical incarnation is so important. Then - slicing it here, pinning it there - somethings can only be done on the stand. Viva la toile!

References:


img1+2 Spring/Summer 2010 style.com

Claude Montana




Claude Montana's work in the 80s and early 90s was BIG - influenced, I'm sure, by the period. However his work betrays an ongoing fascination with volume that cannot be explained away by the decade. His enduring dedication to cut, fabric and creating space between the garment and the body (similarly to Miyake now), Montana's designs are an exciting parallel to my own interest regarding interaction between the body and fabric. Also, discovering his use of folding and peeling - revealing - is a serendipitous realisation considering my current project.

References:

img1+2 http://strawberige.blogspot.com/2009/11/fashion-flashback-claude-montana.html
img3 http://fashionproject9.onsugar.com/Claude-Montana---What-Counts-11823011

Tuesday 31 May 2011

Hussein Chalayan



Hussein Chalayan's Inertia collection and exhibition are an amazing demonstration of successfully creating a feeling of movement in a garment. The windswept effect not only affects how we perceive the clothing, but also the environment they are in.

From a dissemination perspective, I think having supporting objet in an exhibition setting works really well. Elevating the space from a retail feel, the sculptures are also an opportunity to explore the concept or research being explored without being constrained by the body or specific materials.

References:

img1 http://pichaus.com/design-spring-projects-chalayan-@9d8124752199f51da9375c4089c97f5c/

Irving Penn



Irving Penn's photography, particularly his work with Balenciaga, has an exceptional felling of 'woosh' as Peter and I have decided to call it. That is, a sense of the fabric having a life of its own away from the body, traveling independently if you will. A sense of movement, not like rippling drape, but like directional volume - volume which draws the eye across space, thereby creating a feeling of movement.

It is unclear to what extent the garments themselves possess this quality, or to what extent it is created by the photography. Irrespective, the dynamic images are beautiful inspiration for creating garments with structure, volume, and movement.

Yohji Yamamoto



Yohji Yamamoto's sculptural garments show the beautiful and incredible things that can be done in this field - that is, when it is desired for a piece of clothing to depart from the body, however briefly.

The top picture is a photograph by Nick Knight. The sculptural nature of the garment is what I identify with within this image - it is ambiguous whether the garment itself exists in this capacity or whether the method of silhouette depiction in fact imbues it in the garment. The garment sticks out amazingly - supported by the tulle yet itself so minimal, structural and impossible. It jars visually (in a good way) because it isn't following the normal set of physics we interpret the world through: it defies gravity.

Image number two is interesting: I love that it is called a sculpture in the blurb, rather than a garment (which it is). This dress (or skirt/top combo) has me practically in raptures - oh! the layers swinging against each other, pitching forward, leaning back - the two fabrics interacting yet so separate in colour and velocity. Ah!

References:

img1 http://wunderbuzz.co.uk/people/nick-knight/

Sunday 10 April 2011

Haider Ackermann


Haider Ackermann consistenly works to redefine the erogenous zones. Here is a perfect example how the decision to place importance on something (in this scenario, the side of the thigh)is enough to give it actual or real importance. By ascending the heirarchy of conciousness through simply being presented to the audience, the area's meaning becomes charged and magnified by the gaze and focus of the other

This taps into the difference between being shown something and seeing something. A good way to explain what I mean is to describe the way my mother taught the concept to her media students: she brought a girl to the front of the class and sat her on a stool. Then she set up a video camera that streamed her onto a screen.

If it was just a girl sitting on a stool it would not be significant. What is significant is the image: she has been chosen to be presented to you in this pose, with this lighting, in this situation. She is a representation of something, imbued with meaning. She is no longer a girl sitting on a stool.

Similarly, if the woman dressed in Ackermann was wearing nothing, or covered completely, there would be no significance, no erotic sensitivity attached to the thigh area. It is because the area has been framed by intent that it is so.

References:

img1 Fall/Winter '11 www.style.com

Saturday 9 April 2011

Peta Clancy



This work explore the ways the surfaces of the body can be perfected - 'so that we are not reminded of the mutability, fragility of our bodies' Clancy (the artist)says. By creating images of scarred skin, with capillaries visible on the surface, Clancy ephasises our somatic nature. The vaguely grotesque images make us aware of our own skin as we react physically to the depiction of our humanity.

References:

img1+2+3+quote www.petaclancy.com/ root/text/Photofile pc.pdf

Ephemeral



Here is the short film I made for the task 'ephemeral'. Drag the bar along to make it go faster as it is very boring 1x.

Palimpsest

My boyfriend told me about an artist doing something very related to my work (hopefully) but couldn't remember their name! And the interwebs is not being very helpful. So unfortunately I cannot provide any images of their work - I can describe it though.

The artist produced palimsests: they would create an image or artwork, and then inkjet print another image over the top. Then, as time wore on, the inkjet print would fade and reveal the image layered beneath. Artwork that evolves over time, slowly revealing more and more of itself.

Beautiful.

And the idea translates so well to garments: clothing that you get to know over time, garments constantly changing and offering you more.

Wednesday 6 April 2011

Mark Fast


Mark Fast's signature cobweb knits experiment with tensions and restricting the body. By building areas of opaque and transparency the garment both acknowledges the body that it is strangulating but continues to do so. This acknowledgement of the body is something I hope to look at with my own work - reminding the wearer and viewer of the animal visceralness hidden behind the veneer of the garment.

References:

img1 Mark Fast Spring/Summer '11 www. Style.com

Gwendolyn Huskens


Gwendolyn Huskens produced this collection whilst studying at the Design Academy in Eindhoven. It is called 'Medic Esthetic'. Made from materials such as plaster bandages, steel and band-aids, the collection addresses the restrictive and painful incarnation of women's fashion so common today - providing a cheeky 'solution'.

References:

img1 www.blackbookmag.com/article/the-new-skyscraper-heel-now-injury-equipped/4862

Shadi Ghadirian


Shadi Ghadirian's work 'Untitled 1' from the series Like Everyday explores issues of identity, gender and social and physical restrictions. What I see as familiar between this artists work and my own is the desire to investigate the relationship between the natural body and the covered body - the tension.

Also interesting in this piece is that the garment or covering is restricting by being loose, rather than tight. The covering invokes a feeling of stifling or suffocation, the body inside seemingly entombed, possibly a cadaver covered in the sheets of death.

References:

img1 dunedin.art.museum/exhibitions.asp?p_3&y=2009

Helmut Newton



Helmut Newton's work explores both excessive sumptuousness and harsh restriction. This dichotomic approach to the presentation of the female body results in photographs of sensuous bondage - the body is constrained but the sexuality isn't.

References:

img1 'The Empowered Woman' - Vogue (1995) www.trenddelacreme.com
img2 yujinyohe.blogspot.com

Carol Christian Poell


What prompted me to included Poell in my index was something the owner of Eastern Market said a few years ago concerning his work: that Poell deliberately cut jacket shoulders very small, and that he loved the feeling of it. He loved the pressure, restriction, and effect it had on his posture and the heightened awareness of his body.

References:

img1 http://ffffound.com/image/357d98c2ffeb02f9af3df9e1af530d1982faa526
img2 http://darklandsberlin.com