Showing posts with label plastic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plastic. Show all posts

Tuesday

Fashion Charts VII


1. Céline Fall/Winter 2014


2. Stella McCartney Fall/Winter 2014


3. Missoni Fall/Winter 2014

Longing for plastic fantastic embellishments. Toys 'R' Her - that only money can buy. The careerist (Phoebe), the feminist (Stella), the female nerd (Angela). The Parisian woman is emancipating her inner child. Which is her interpretation of men-erism.
/HORST

Sunday

Repeat, Inverse




Thom Browne Fall/Winter 2014

I am happy this does exist. What Rei proposed as two-dimensionality for women, now returns as two-three-dimensionality for men. Of course, Thom had to add a deeper inlay, that of foliation and vacuum.
/HORST

Image credits Catwalking

Post Paris XXVIII

A 'False Encyclopaedia' double feature with Alexander Fury, discussing:
Céline Fall/Winter 2013





Céline has always been about a reality of dressing. You could call it rational - like that dowdy mid-nineteenth century movement that encouraged women to cast off the shackles of their corsets and don by-and-large shapeless velvet garments that could have been sported by Mrs Arnolfini circa her Van Eyck portrait. Incidentally, she featured in the bumper inspiration book Phoebe Philo placed on every seat to unravel her latest offering. But of course, her garments were neither dowdy, nor shapeless, even when they seemed crafted from chequered laundry bags. That felt like an Arte Povera touch, a reversal of luxury - like Gabrielle Chanel lining her drab woollen coats in sable, the luxury hidden for the wearer. Likewise, those coats that looked like plastic pound-shop schmattes are probably amongst the most expensive of the entire season. And, somehow, along that route from laudromat spin-cycle to Céline catwalk, they have been magically transmogrified into the most desirable. It's a fashion miracle. Except there's nothing inexplicable about it.
/ALEX



Phoebe Philo's maximalist minimalism turns models back into mannequins. Clinging to clutches. Making sure the product is perfectly visible. The message "We are for sale!" is worn on their sleeves. Margiela's merchandise as jewellery comes to mind. The 'cheap' and mundane transformed into a luxury it-item. Infused with a 'slash' of vagina feminism. You need a bag?
/HORST








1. Céline Fall/Winter 2013
2. Hyacinthe Rigaud Louis XIV, 1701
3. Rachel Whiteread Embankment, 2005-6
4. Robert Mapplethorpe Patti Smith, 1973
5. Maison Martin Margiela Spring/Summer 2002
6. Céline Fall/Winter 1975
7. Ida Applebrook Group H #4, 1969
8. Céline Fall/Winter 2013

More about Alexander Fury LOVE Magazine

Thoughts On Pop Culture, Sex & Fashion







1. Iggy Pop 1996
2. Anthony Kiedis 1984
3. Ann Demeulemeester Spring/Summer 2003
4. Maison Martin Margiela Spring/Summer 1989

The sexualization of our everyday life is supposedly enforced by images of pop culture and advertising. Yet, the tension between covering and revealing seems more like a cyclical variation. Things being perceived as explicit in 2012 are despaired and prudish compared to 1996 (Iggy Pop in plastic trousers) or 2004 (Janet Jackson's Nipplegate). We've come so far and still, topless men and visible nipples are scandalous shockers. Why don't we dare anymore?
/HORST
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