Showing posts with label Americana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Americana. Show all posts

Monday

Art Interiors V








Artworks Ken Price

In his Americina interior utopia, Ken Price depicts 'waiting rooms' as the suburban dream of 'things to come'. The protagonists are absent, somewhere outside the Hollywood Hills. Waiting to be discovered - or to be rescued from their boredom.
/HORST

Sunday

Post Milan II

A 'False Encyclopaedia' double feature with Alex Fury, discussing:
Prada Spring/Summer 2014







Tropical prints, looser, loucher shapes, a twenty-first century re-imagining of a twentieth-century American vacation. It was the fantasy rather than the reality of a Hawaii holiday that Prada was articulating for summer, I reckon.

Toting those suitcases longingly with your office drone suiting, trousers loosened up, that forties feel. Burnt umber and burgundy and evergreen and slithery satin bomber-jackets, all all those carnation and hibiscus prints plastered over everything. There was something of the land-locked, Tikki-tourist, those mid-century, middle-class middle-Americans who never made it to the tropics, but dreamed ceaselessly about it nevertheless. The sweaters with sunset scenes intarsia-knit into them were postcards - 'wish we were there', rather than 'wish you were here'. Just like the cheesecake pin-ups they'll never have, and those good-looking girls they'll never get, flouncing after them in flirtatious, diamanté-strewn showgirl dresses.

Mrs Prada's kick was unattainable fantasy. Except, it was her fantasy of that unattainable fantasy. And you can have it, at a price.
/ALEX

At least the sleeve layering added a moment of abstraction within an über-literal collection that got stuck in 1940s nostalgia - when the exotic image of Polyn-Asia was Americanised in memorabilia and gas station postcard kitsch. Here, irony reveals itself as not 'pretending to pretend' but 'being what is': derisory, pathetic, mediocre (to quote Mehdi Belhaj Kacem). I'd like to burn those memories.
/HORST








1. Prada Spring/Summer 2014
2. Elvis Presley Blue Hawaii, 1961
3. Businessman 1950s
4. Rolf Armstrong Sunny Skies, 1953
5. Roy Lichtenstein Sunrise, 1984
6. Wassily Kandinsky Tension In Red, 1926
7. Ed Ruscha Burning Gas Station, 1966
8. Prada Spring/Summer 2014

All about Alex Fury

Monday

Post Paris XXI

A false encyclopaedic guide to the Paris collections, presenting:
Saint Laurent Spring/Summer 2013




1. Yves Saint Laurent by Hedi Slimane Fall/Winter 2000
2. Yves Saint Laurent Fall/Winter 1969
3. Dior Homme Fall/Winter 2006

This time, we are looking forward and looking back on Hedi Slimane's futurepast. A return and study of self-reference. Reflecting the heritage of his own as well as his new world. Decorated with glitter and many many bows.
/HORST

Image credits Catwalking, Hedi Slimane
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