Friday 27 November 2009

Digitaria: Opening a Dialogue between Fashion, Art and Politics

Photography by George Mavrikos

Look no further than Digitaria on Soho’s Berwick Street if you are seeking a bubbling environment striving to connect and create dialogue between fashion and the arts. But it is much more than just a space to host the Digitaria label which, designed by Eleftheria Arapoglou and Stavros Karelis, the Creative Director, aims to ‘create affordable, well tailored in house fashion...and to combine the world of art with fashion and politics’. At Digitaria London also expect a host of experiential things in this multi-purpose store-come-gallery space, ‘from sound installations and film screenings to gallery shows and what will probably be very strange performances by Theo Adams, Masumi Tipsy and, Scottee’. Digitaria plugs itself as ‘aiming to bring a fresh approach to the industry, combining fashion, art, music and performance to create interactive spaces you want to shop in’. It is an environment where they hope anyone can express his or her ideas.

Furthermore, with their buyer, Paul Joyce, Stavros also works alongside young talented designers to promote their collections. Their current protégée is British Designer Millie Cockton whose new label is called EUPHEMIA. Her work has already been featured in Dazed and Confused, and she is rapidly making a name for herself. Androgyny is strong in her work, but so is the notion of the ‘individuality of the wearer identifying with the pieces’.

Photography by Mark Cant, Notion July 2009

Photography by Toyin, Dazed and Confused, March 2009

They are also currently working with Ada Zanditon, who like many of the other designers they nourish, has strong ecological fundamentals. ‘She uses a range of organic and natural fabrics as well as innovative waste reducing and energy conscious solutions to create sculptural, elegant, desirable fashion.’ Furthermore, she doesn’t use leather or fur in her Ready-to-wear collections or accessories.
Photography by Paul Morgan

Digitaria recently held the Faroe Islands SS10 designer showcase, at which Pop note washed leather and stretched jersey pieces by Barbara I Gongini and chunky neon knits from Johanna Av Steinum as highlights. Barbara I Gongini, again a designer committed to sustainability, deserves a whole post of her own - but here's a taster to whet your appetite.

Barbara i Gongini AW 09

Digitaria is creating an exciting dialogue, connecting up fashion and art and politics; as Karelis says 'nothing exists without its meaning, however many people don't see the idea behind a creation, even though most of the time socio-political issues that affect us all are incorporated in fashion and art’. I suppose this is exactly what I regularly bang on about – to fully appreciate fashion, and to exploit all of its potential we must put it in its place in our society. However, I think it is also important that we start to recognise that, as Digitaria obviously have, sustainability is also a political issue that designers have a responsibility to commit too. It’s fantastic to see so many young designers (many of whom I will be introducing you to over the next few weeks) are seizing this opportunity, many under the guidance of Digitaria, and are using locally sourced materials and adopting a healthy attitude towards sustainable fashion. As these designers prove, it is highly possible for inspiring fashion and art to take up this challenge without compromising aesthetics or progressive technology and design. As Ada Zanditon says, she ‘pioneers creating and evolving a high end womenswear business with a common sense approach to sustainability…and a belief in business that treats people, planet and profit with equal importance’.

Tuesday 24 November 2009

Komodo AW10 Team Meeting


A sneak preview of the Komodo AW10 shoot team, Kelly and Jules from Foundation Agency, photographer Claire Pepper and hair and make-up starlet Joella Butler, in action. There were fabric samples, drawings, tear sheets and mood boards...but as of yet, no actual samples! We have a beautiful autumnal palette with bursts of purple, berry, red and mustard to work with. Classic tweeds, checks, wools and paisley paired with the original Komodo girl ethnic and laid back aesthetic, creates a well-traveled, chic, fun spirited and wearable collection.
I'm looking at some amazing shoes by eco designers Beyond Skin and Where, to sit alongside some vintage boots and statement chunky heels with socks. Jewellery by Made, and some amazing vintage and recycled pieces and feathers galore are going to take this collection forward from it's ethical roots. With the rise in interest in eco fashion, headed by Emma Watson's collaboration with People Tree and talk of a Leona Lewis/Stella McCartney shoe and bag range, this AW10 Komodo collection is in a great position to attract new attention and define it's place in the market. Watch this space...

Models 1 New Face Georgina Howard to be the face of Komodo for AW10

Image thanks to Models 1

Monday 23 November 2009

Radiation by Invasion - Iris van Herpen






Here's a little bit more art, this time by Iris van Halpern. Her SS10 'Radiation by Invasion' collection, was shown back in September at Blow PR Presents, where her work caught the eye of Harrods. She will now be the first designer to partake in the Harrods New Designer Platform, and an exhibition of her work will be showing at Harrods from today, November 23rd, until December 6th.

All images copyright Michel Zoeter

Georgia Hardinge - Artist through Fashion

Pretty much love everything by Georgia Hardinge, who says 'I believe that the highest approach of art awareness is through fashion. Enabling a large community to access my work.' Fashion is art, not a shopping list of what one must or must not wear and have and be. Her work consists of modern fabric sculpturing, 'accentuating the important features of the body, combining positive and negative space to meld both the delicate and structural as one'.







Thursday 12 November 2009

The Silent Revolution - The Shoot




Photography by Ian Harding
www.ianharding.info

The Silent Revolution

‘Art and cultural consumption are predisposed, consciously and deliberately or not, to fulfil a social function of legitimating social differences’. (‘Distinction’, Bourdieu)

The counter culture movement of the 1960s and 1970s has become as much a fashion movement as a political one. Forty years on the key fashion trademarks of the counter culture movement are still firmly established, and are open for re-interpretation in our current social context. Florals, denim, ethnic influences, tie-dye and that ‘Woodstock’ vibrancy of colour, texture and print, get the ‘signature look’. However, when viewed, rather than as abstract fashion pieces, but in a context of an era defined by the political conscience and social rebellion of a post-war generation, these signature 70s pieces become tools to convey a political message, both now and then, and the era had lasting social, political and cultural consequences.

Politically the counter culture movement encapsulated student rebellion across the Western world: protesting against the Vietnam War; the excesses of consumerism; the establishment; intolerance and racism; global capitalism and the giant multi-national corporations; and nuclear armament, all against a backdrop of the spread of Communism and violence and suffering in the Third World. A generation, socialized in a period of affluence, was no longer so concerned with material issues, but became what has been called ‘post-materialist’, looking for individual fulfillment, quality of life and self expression. As explained in Inglehart’s Silent Revolution, in 1977: ‘for the younger cohorts, a set of “post-bourgeois” values, relating to the need for belonging and to aesthetic and intellectual needs…take top priority.’ Original counter culture members saw themselves and their own lives as a way to express political and social beliefs and so personal appearance was at the forefront of their political expression. Clothes were used to make a political statement and to express an alternative way of life and an alternative sense of fashion to that of ‘the Establishment’. Woodstock in 1969, the famous festival of music and the arts, was a platform for this disaffection from the dominant culture, and a very visual symbol of the political empowerment of the young. As captured by Eric Hobsbawn in The Age of Extremes, the State was checked by an increasingly rebellious population with much more individualistic attitudes than ever before; it was ‘the triumph of the individual over society.’

The use of exotic motifs, now iconically linked to that era, were adopted by the counter culture movement out of concern for Western exploitation of the Third World in symbols of solidarity: leather accessories and the hippy head-band in the manner of Native Americans; the caftan; the PLO-style Arab headscarf; Afghan sheepskin coats; and long scarves from India. These were all worn in a sign of unity and as political statement pieces. Second-hand clothing – a statement of living on the margins of a capitalist society and of self sufficiency, demonstrating an opposition to the wastefulness of the consumer society – was also ‘in’. Self-expression through external appearance led to free and creative stylistic additions such as customising with bleach and tie-dye, Indian inspired batik, paisley, scarves and gold jewellery, patches and ethnic inspired embroidery, drawing on national dress from, for example, Greece and Turkey. Body painting became an art form as hippies adorned themselves with psychedelic patterns across their bodies.

Haute Couture went for the hippy utopia and the street fashions de riguer were sold in boutiques in Paris, LA and London. These eclectic influences from the street movement were seen in the collections of couturiers: Pucci’s 1960s interpretation saw geometric prints in a kaleidoscope of colour; Marc Bohan at Dior showed psychedelic patterns in 1967; and Missoni ran their iconic bold bright space dyed weave patterns. Vogue too acted to make the painted psychedelic prints a high fashion trend. The national dress (which we see interpreted in Yves Saint Laurent’s Africane collection of 1967), tunics (Halston, designer to the rich and famous of society, showed tunics and matching trousers to dress America’s real woman), florals (as shown by Kenzo in the early 1970s), and peasant style blouses and skirts (as shown by Yves Saint Laurent in his Russia Collection, 1976/77, and folkloric tops shown in Jean-Paul Gaultier’s 1976 collection).There was a rush back to nature, ‘a return to paradise’, with the inclusion of flowers and natural materials, (Biba, in the late 1960s, ran cheesecloth dresses with lace trims, layered sleeves, tied backs and tied cuffs), all further enhanced by ‘barefoot and braless’, Jesus sandals and long hair. This ‘back to nature mentality’ saw the 1973 ‘beige phase’ in high end fashion. The hippy preference for baring flesh, in conjunction with the sexual liberation of the era, saw the trend for sheer blouses over bare breasts arrive on the catwalks in 1968. The hunt for unique second-hand finds, such as a velvet jacket, were too, soon enough all copied, and, using this example, velvet flared suits suddenly flooded the market. Denim, and Levi Strauss, became the uniform of the un-conformist, it united classes and helped the wearer make a philosophical, political or fashion statement.

The fashion revolution saw young creative designers responding to these new attitudes, ‘they were lively, highly individual, inventive…and greatly concerned with the creation of “image”’. Inglehart’s ‘post-materialist’ youth led to, probably for the first time, designers reacting to and interpreting their street movement. Much is written on Yves Saint Laurent who found his source of inspiration on the street and captured some of the spirit of the times. Along with the collection specifically mentioned above, he added details from the hippies eastern influences; his 1969 collection, a patchwork and mix of patterns and outfits of romantic silk and organdie, was for the sophisticated hippy. Furthermore, in 1968 he launched his Rive Gauche range ‘named after the left bank of the Seine in Paris, a favourite haunt of students, intellectuals and existentialists’ – the new in-group. Yves Saint Laurent created antiestablishment fashion at high end prices for the super rich who ‘wanted their image to be as “anti—establishment” as it was beautiful’. Couturiers Emanuel Ungaro, Pierre Cardin and Audre Courreges similarly responded to these attitudes. Biba, the first high fashion and low price point brand designed by Barbara Hulanicki, showed the classless aspirations of the time, she targeted this new generation and Biba became the epitome of a style conscious idealism. It fulfilled the 1960s commitment to ‘live fast, die young and leave a beautiful corpse’. Mary Quant’s shop, ‘Bazaar’, run with her husband, celebrated youth and fun and bohemianism. It was an upmarket alternative that drew essence from the emerging group identity of young Britain. And thus, the anti-culture found itself to be the in-culture in the oxymoron of non-conformist fashion; by adopting a stylistic alternative the movement had remained firmly imbedded in a culture defined by style, and with this, ‘anti-fashion’ became ‘official fashion’ and lost its attitude.

The new demands of the post-materialist, post-Second World War youth, looking for individual fulfillment, quality of life and self expression, led to a changing role in fashion in our society. Now in our modern society ‘celebrity’ fills a similar cultural niche as the ‘political conscience’ did in the 60s and 70s. Through association with a celebrity one attaches themselves to all their transferable connotations, such as a particular social class or attitude or lifestyle or style. Furthermore, the anti-fashion of the 60s and early 70s probably changed the way we wear clothes forever. Where previously one bought a whole outfit, the new individualistic requirement of the trend demanded one took a little bit from here, there and everywhere, ‘mass produced clothing…mixed with clothes from past decades and other cultures’.

This was more than a political movement; it was a movement of the arts. As Oscar Wilde put it: ‘the artist is the creator of beautiful things’, but ‘all art is quite useless’. The 1960s saw the young united with a common objective, whether politically motivated, interested in popular culture or naively dreaming of a life full of peace and love. Their common objective, ultimately, was their image.

Sources
John Peacock, The 1970s
John Peacock, The 1960s
Charlotte Seeling, The Century of the Designer
Alwyn W Turner, BIBA: The Biba Experience
Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Preface

Wednesday 11 November 2009

The Uniform

Here's a link to an interesting piece discussing military uniform. Although it may not seem an obvious connection, uniforms, particularly military, are deeply related to the the issues of Fashion and it's role in society, and so is a topic I will be covering in some amount of depth over the next few months. For now, enjoy...