15/05/2015

Cultural Copying or Meaningful Influences?

In a time when different cultural traditions and approaches are influencing everything, from high fashion brands to newer and more unestablished labels, the lines between right and wrong when it comes to finding inspiration in other cultures, has faded. In the case of the new Paris-based brand Awale, that bases both its brand-value as well as its design aesthetic around the combination of African influences and modern approaches, the topic of cultural borrowing, once again, feels current. Awale markets its pieces as ”ethnic”, by proclaiming them to be a result of blending of cultural and textile traditions. The result are handmade pieces in limited editions, that leave us with questions about wether or not this really is an acceptable way of marketing such a product. Should ethnicity be exploited in order to sell material goods?

This is a topic without clear directives or guidelines, if there would have been any we wouldn’t feel the need of discussing it, but there aren’t and we are forced to. Fashion can and should, as any other art form, be able to be both provocative and express and interpret different cultures. What it shouldn’t do is to misuse that creative freedom, due to the fact that creativity comes with a responsibility which ,when treated right, can grow to a fantastic opportunity that opens doors to new cultures and lifestyles for people who wouldn’t otherwise have been able to explore them. When taking inspiration from something we aren’t familiar with or bringing it to a context that will understand it to an even lesser extent, we have the responsibility to find out more about it before translating it to the rest of the world through a simple piece of clothing. If that is done with respect and a genuine interest in the culture and traditions we are influenced by, it will turn out to be both a beautiful and a meaningful way of designing.

Hanna Cronsjö 
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14/05/2015

Fashion Editor as Catalyst: Alison Settle

Of the many professions linked to fashion, that of the fashion editor is one of the most desired and sought after. It is also one of the widest and most unattainable. No schools offer programs to teach the subject – if it were to be considered a ‘subject’ – and surely no abracadabra can make the magic of transforming a ‘normal’ human being into a good fashion editor. This has surely to do with history; the work of the editor of a fashion magazine has historically been performed by strong personalities, whose involvement in fashion permitted them to show how fashion is eradicated in social, cultural and political contexts. Alison Settle is one of these, almost legendary, figures.

Settle was born in in Kemp Town, Brighton, in 1891. After attending a secretarial college and a journalism course, she started working for various magazines, writing for the “Sunday Pictorial”, “Sunday Herald”, “Eve” and the “Daily Mirror”. In 1926 she became editor of the British edition of Vogue. Under her guidance, the magazine grew in popularity and was set to become one of the most appreciated magazine in Britain. Settle shaped her magazine as a sophisticated product of culture, considering writing as the real core of the magazine, inviting some of the greatest voices of those years to write for Vogue, as Colette, Edith Sitwell, Vita Sackville West. She involved the most brilliant illustrators, photographers and models – George Lepape, Eduard Benito, Edward Steichen, Lee Miller – supporting the writing with images and graphic expedients become iconic. Not only fashion was covered on the pages of ‘her’ Vogue, which was directed to a varied audience, spanning from the cultured ladies of the aristocracy – category to which she in person belonged to – to the working women of the middle class and upcoming feminists. Articles were wide in the subjects, from cooking and wine to art and politics.

Settle was primarily interested in the quality of British design, working incessantly as a channel between manufacturers and designer, easing the dialogue between production and creativity. She collaborated both with the Council for Art & Industry and the Council of Industrial Design, encouraging affordability and good design, dealing with fashion as a concrete matter, part of the everyday life. It is for this reason that she invented a feature, now copied in the most part of fashion magazines, called ‘Vogue’s Smart Fashions for Limited Incomes’, which proposed solutions of taste to women dealing with the restrictions of an upcoming war. After her involvement with Vogue, which ended in 1935, she became correspondent, among the others, for ‘The Observer’. Her sensibility and experience permitted her to describe society from a privileged point of view; her column, entitled ‘From a Woman’s Viewpoint’ gathered the voices of women, reporting their needs and ideas, and made her a sort of benchmark in the emancipation march. She was a founder member of the Women’s Press Club, and in 1961 she was the first woman awarded an OBE for services to fashion journalism.

In her late years, she also started working on a history of fashion, never finished, whose notes are now conserved in the Alison Settle Archive in Brighton, together with letters, photographs and records of her work between 1930s and 1970s. Looking at her life, it is not difficult to understand why the role of the editor is one of the most complex and multifaceted of the panorama of fashion, which goes way beyond the ‘limit’ of the subject as it is commonly considered. Her interest in fashion was just a starting point not only to individuate a style; it served her as a lens through which she could analyze society in an active way, proposing solutions and promoting innovation both in production and in critical thinking, making her a catalyst of progress in the wider sense.

Marta Franceschini – Images courtesy of Vogue Magazine 
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13/05/2015

Style Suggestions: Colour Burst

Don’t shy away from colour, embrace it with vibrant pieces to enhance your wardrobe. You don’t have to do head to toe colour but mix it through with neutral pieces and have some fun with your looks.

Jacket: AMI, Sweater: Carven, Pants: Marni, Sneakers: Raf Simmons, Backpack: Valentino, Watch: Uniform Wares

Styling by Vanessa Cocchiaro 

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13/05/2015

China Through the Looking Glass

“I’m not strange, weird, off, nor crazy, my reality is just different from yours.” ― Lewis Carroll, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking Glass.

The quote helps to illustrate the thought behind a new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. An exhibition that examines orientalism note through the Western eyes. It acknowledges the notion that orientalism or the influences from Eastern culture are always integrated through a Western perspective. This is a key element in the “China Through the Looking Glass” exhibit. The old and the new are at center stage, with a not towards conscious processes cultural appropriation and how the essence of the inspiration was often lost in translation. From as early as the 16th century, Europe has had contact with China, a contact leading the West to become captivated by mysterious items from the East. It was a fascination that would inspire many fashion designers, among which, notably, Paul Poiret.

Every room of the exhibition is meant to make the impression of a movie scene. There are cinematic clips on display in each gallery allowing the viewers to learn about different Chinese influences such as the Mao suit as well as the silk trade and the collaboration of Chinese and American films with actress Anna May Wong in the center as a muse to designers such as Yves Saint Laurent.

High fashion is contrasted with Chinese costumes, porcelains, and other artefacts, including films, to expose Western reflection on Chinese images. Milliner Stephen Jones has created headwear for every mannequin, with hats and tiaras inspired from antique Chinese plates, teapots and vases. The exhibition as a whole features over 140 pieces of haute couture and avant-garde art in conjunction with Chinese art. This includes works by Armani, Cristobal Balenciaga, John Galliano, Roberto Cavalli and many more, provoking the visitor to take a closer look at our inspiration and grasp the concept of cultural differences.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s “China: Through the Looking Glass” exhibition is currently on display and will run until August 16, 2015.

Victoria Edman 
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08/05/2015

Max.Tan an Example of Avant-Garde Asian Style

Asia has grown to become a fashion continent to count on, and not just for Western high fashion brands that open new stores and develop collections specially suited for the Asian market. The most interesting aspect of this progress is, instead, the development of Asian fashion, with its new creative and innovative designers gaining more publicity outside Asia as well.

Fashion is a hard-to-define phenomenon. It’s both affecting and the effect of our society and is evolving along side the rest of it at same time as it feels like a world of its own. There are various ideas and theories trying to describe the fashion phenomenon, some say it all started within the society of the West, others believe it has always existed all over the world. Fashion can often be seen from a democratic point of view, there it always balances between the aim of belonging and differentiating. Taking into account the background in the fashion history and theories about where and how it all started, it is therefore especially interesting that Asian fashion has taken a more central role within the West’s fashion scene.

The Singapore based brand, Max.Tan is an example of an Asian label that due to its interesting approach to fashion, has done a great success abroad. Their design aesthetic can be described as clean and crispy, with sharp cuts and playful shapes. Max.Tan aims to create an alternative and quiet fashion lifestyle, based on a mix of various influences such as masculine, feminine, oversize, undersized, deconstruction, reconstruction and transformation. They are all combined into a versatile, architectural and multi decisional, cultural approach, which is exemplified by everything from their pieces to their Singapore flagship store, where, besides finding their latest collations, one can also find the Swedish-based brand, ODEUR. This strengthens the thesis about fashion, as being at its absolute best when including various different perspectives and cultures. The only sad part is that it took us so long to finally start to take a real interest in all the great talent outside the West.

Hanna Cronsjö 
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07/05/2015

Archives of Life – Armani/Silos

When, in 1983, Diana Vreeland dedicated an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Arts in New York to Yves Saint Laurent, she managed to bring contemporary fashion to the attention of the art world. Her choice to show the work of one living designer in an established institution has set sail to most of fashion exhibitions organised from then on. The action was groundbreaking mostly because it brought contemporary objects, the kind of objects you could find on the streets and actually buy, within the almost sacred walls of a museum. Giorgio Armani was dedicated a retrospective at the Guggenheim Museum in New York in 2000. The retrospective, curated by Germano Celant and Harold Koda and designed by Robert Wilson, was conceptually inspired by the one Vreeland dedicated to YSL and reflected on the practice of Armani and his contribution not only to fashion, but to culture in a wider sense. The exhibition then moved to Bilbao, Berlin, London, Tokyo, Shanghai, and Milan, always adding new paragraphs to the discourse started in New York.

Fifteen years after the first exhibition, Giorgio Armani inaugurated his own museum in Milan. Though a ‘museum’ is not its proper name. Mr Armanis decided to shape his museum in the form of the living archive and to call it ‘silos’, recalling the storage units in which food was stowed. The collection of almost 5-hundred outfits puts on stage the 40 years of activity of the brand, individuating four main themes that have characterised the production: daywear, exoticisms, colour-schemes and light. His is an archive that is not organised chronologically, but as a reflection on the inspirations, individuating paths and creating sentimental families of outfits to guide the audience to the understanding of his most iconic designs. Each corner can be read singularly, and still fits into a wider discourse that visually communicates a recurrent thought, a feeling. The dimension of time passing is intentionally lost, in favour of a transverse crossing of the history of the fashion house, which is also the story of a man’s life.

The clothes are displayed without context and stripped of their narrative apparatus – advertising campaign, sketches, fashion-shows, shootings. This corollary can be found in the digital archive, on the third floor, which is open to public and holds almost 4000 records, between technical descriptions of all the items, cultural references and links to art and fashion history. To think and build a whole museum dedicated to the practice of one designer is different from curating a temporary exhibition. Both of them deal with time: the first is set into a well-defined period and the message it holds becomes a memory after its ending, while the second has to resist time and challenge its course, always having something to say in its relatively fixed form. It is only in this way that the museum, rather than being a static institution, becomes a breathing organism, bearing and supporting always new and fresh interpretations.

Marta Franceschini 
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04/05/2015

Style Suggestions: Minimalist

Simplicity is the key so minimize your wardrobe this season, with block colours and straight silhouettes. These pieces will transcend from year to year, so investing in something special will be worth the dent in the credit card.

Jacket: Jil Sander, Dress: Calvin Klein, Purse: Stella McCartney, Shoes: Christopher Kane, Sunglasses: Acne Studios, Necklace: Chloé

Styling by Vanessa Cocchiaro 

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01/05/2015

Fashion Talents Take Over Hyères

The thirtieth edition of the International Festival of Fashion and Photography in Hyères, France, has just finished after three days and as many fashion shows. The competition between the ten selected designers was tough, and the jury, led by Chanel’s studio director Virginie Viard and including names such as Caroline de Maigret and Carine Roitfeld, thought every designer to be great in their own, unique way, which made it hard to compare them. Nevertheless, the final decision for the Première Vision Grand Prize fell on the Franco-German designer Annelie Schubert, based on the opinion that she has presented strong and elegant pieces with beautiful materials and colours. Besides international recognition and prestige, the top prize includes the possibility to create pieces in collaboration with Chanel’s specialized Métiers d’Art houses, including Massaro, Maison Michel, Lemarié, and Lesage and a collaboration with Petit Bateau. Therefore, Schubert will be given the tools to build her own brand and develop her design skills, and, judging from her showcase in Hyères, the results might be extremely interesting.

The other prize awarded in the fashion category is the Chloé Prize which was awarded to the German designer Anna Bornhold, for her innovative materials which she had created by threading scraps over a stiff cotton base, resulting in a weightless material and an easy look which the Chloé president Geoffroy de la Bourdonnaye thought was right in line with the brand’s aesthetic.

This year’s festival was a great and special edition, not only because of Chanel being this year’s guest of honour or because Karl Lagerfeld was this year’s Artistic Director or because of the fact that it was the festivals 30th anniversary; instead it was a special edition because it truly celebrated the most central aspect of the festival – the young talents.

Hanna Cronsjö 
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30/04/2015

Living is Modelling, Modelling is Living: Gia Carangi

What is it that makes a model a supermodel? One of the features required for a model is to be chameleonic, to change in order to suit one look or the other. The other is to have a strong personality, in order to be remembered. These two characteristics seems to be entirely opposite, but, as usually happens in fashion, contradictions bear the most interesting results.

Gia Carangi is one of the first models who gained that prestigious prefix – ‘super’. Carangi was born in Philadelphia, but soon moved to New York to become a professional model, under the wing of the infamous former model and agent Wilhelmina Cooper. Openly lesbian, she soon started to work with the most important magazines and photographers, literally attracting the camera with her intense eyes, slender figure and signature androgynous-yet-sexy look, which supported the ambiguity that underlined the 80s aesthetic manifesto. It is difficult to see her as a muse, and harder to identify her with one of the designers she has worked with. In a period, between the seventies and the eighties, when fashion designers were adamant in defining an aesthetic that could characterize them and make them recognizable, Gia stood in campaigns for the most disparate of names, from Giorgio Armani to Versace, always showing a different side of her personality. Her force was that, when modelling, she was not performing a character. She was just being herself, picking from her many personalities, the one that suited best the mood of the brand she was wearing.

Even though at times her personal life and habits affected her work – she could leave the set with apparently no reason if she felt not in the ‘mood’ for a shooting, while, towards the end of her career, her addiction to drugs was incontrollable – her complexities were exactly what made her successful. Her spontaneity and freedom, together with her ‘dark sides’, transformed her from a model into a subject. The photographer Francesco Scavullo, one of her closest friends, did not refer to Gia as a model, but as a human being simply living in front of the camera. For him, to photograph her was ‘like photographing a stream of consciousness’. When talking about Gia Carangi, clothes seem to disappear, and even fashion as an idea gets a deepness only comparable to that of real life. It is not about what she wears, but how her inner self feels in that moment, with those clothes on. And here we get to the other fundamental feature of a supermodel: to make clothes look natural, to make them disappear, fused with their personality. It is this silent art that turns them into desirable objects we instinctively long for, thanks to the quiet spectacle that fashion is able to create.

Marta Franceschini 
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29/04/2015

Missoni, Art, Colour

The family-run brand Missoni was launched more than 60 years ago, in 1953, when Tai and Rosita Missoni began manufacturing their signature knit designs, growing since then into a true fashion empire. Currently on show at the MA*GA museum in Gallarate, is an exhibition accentuating the relationship between Missoni’s aesthetic and the arts. “Missoni, Art, Colour” is an examination of the mutual influences, inspirations and references that developed between the Italian brand and the art world, through their particular interest in colour and patterns.

The exhibition opens with a video installation, dated 2009, by artist Ali Kazma, and continues with a candid imagery of the fashion house, illustrating the mix of modern design and craftsmanship which in many ways is embodied by the Missoni brand. Besides the colourful designs displayed on a raised platform, a prominent place in the exhibition was given to Ottavio Missoni’s personal artworks, exhibited among paintings by renowned international artists, including works by Kandinsky, Paul Klee and Sonia Delaunay, who has influenced the aesthetic of Missoni and their vivacious patterns and unique style. Installations by Luca Missoni and Angelo Jelmini that feature huge spools of colored threads and nettings of fabric compose another part of the showcase, together with over 100 fashion pieces from the Missoni library.

“Missoni, Art, Color” gives an insight into the constantly ongoing discussion about the relationship between fashion and art, seen through the narrow lens of the Italian heritage brand. The exhibition does not claim to comment on the matter outsides of Missoni territory, yet it gives a clear example of how intertwined both sectors are and how, over time, they have come to influence each other, with a silent dialogue between artists and fashion functioning both as inspiration and influence. The exhibition Missoni, Art, Color is currently at display at MA*GA Museum in Gallarate, Italy and will run until the 8th of November 2015.

Victoria Edman – Images courtesy of MAGA Museum 
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