Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fashion. Show all posts

Mar 4, 2019

Laura Laine

Laura Laine is a Finnish fashion illustrator who has worked with ShowStudio, Vogue Japan, Vogue Germany, Pantene, Zara, and H&M.

She frequently illustrates women with prominent strands of long hair. Her interest in hair, however, derives little from realistic hairstyles. As Laine explains in a recent interview with Buro247, her intention is to use hair “as this voluminous element in the composition." It weaves into the clothing, billows around the head, and moves in engaging ways around the body. See for yourself.


This Rodarte SS16 illustration was part of ShowStudio’s 2015 A Beautiful Darkness exhibition.


This specially commissioned illustration, called It's Only a Game, was created for ShowStudio’s 2011 Illustrating McQueen project. 
It paid homage to a selection of fashion designer Alexander McQueen's most pivotal designs.

The sinuous and effusive strands lead one to associate Laine’s work with whimsy and delight. But the distorted and twisted lines also have a darkness that are reminiscent of Aubrey Beardsley and Harry Clarke. The long hair donning the women in Laine's illustrations is not just a compositional and stylistic device; it is a signature element of her work.


Left: Fall 2014 - Marni for ShowStudio | Right: Illustration from in Espoo Museum of Modern Art’s For Fashion’s Sake May 3 – September 3, 2017


Both illustrations are from an editorial for Muse Mag circa 2011.


Jul 17, 2016

Hair by Sam McKnight

There is another exhibition on hair coming. (I failed to write up the one in Utrecht earlier this year, but will one of these days....) This one, Hair by Sam McKnight, will feature fashion photographs!


The exhibition will be on view at the Somerset House in London from 2 November 2016 – 12 March  2017. Here's the press release. Of course, I question the claim I've formatted in boldface below. I predict a bunch of fashion photos on the wall with some brief didactic text introducing the exhibition. Call me cynical.

This autumn, Somerset House is proud to present Hair by Sam McKnight, a major exhibition celebrating the master hairstylist’s remarkable 40 year career, from the late 1970s to the current day. An integral part of the fashion industry, Sam has been instrumental in helping to develop the images of Kate Moss, Linda Evangelista, Christy Turlington, Naomi Campbell and Princess Diana among many others. He is one of the first session stylists to have carved out a career solely within fashion, having worked on hundreds of fashion editorial shoots, advertising campaigns and catwalk shows. He has shot over 100 covers for British Vogue alone, as well as numerous other magazines and worked with most international fashion designers from Chanel to Vivienne Westwood.

The exhibition will unveil the little-known creative process behind the craft of hair styling within fashion and explore the relationships between McKnight and key, long-term collaborators; photographers such as Nick Knight and Patrick Demarchelier, models including Kate Moss, Stella Tennant and Christy Turlington, stylist Lucinda Chambers, and designer Karl Lagerfeld.

This will be the first exhibition of its kind, looking at hair from a new perspective and contextualising its wider cultural significance and the role of the session stylist within fashion. It will include some of the most iconic images in popular culture and some of fashion’s most memorable looks, from Princess Diana’s short, slicked back style to Madonna’s Bedtime Stories, and Tilda Swinton channelling David Bowie, tracing different movements and hairstyles, from nostalgic to androgynous, romantic to sexy, red to platinum, cataloguing the transformative nature of hair within the image.

Exhibiting pieces from Sam’s extensive archive, gathered over his 40 year career, the exhibition will feature photography, magazines, catwalk and behind-the-scenes footage, private photographs and full outfit looks as well as commissioned wigs and hairpieces. Grouped into thematic sections, the exhibition will explore process, relationships and collaboration, movement, transformation, the shoot and the catwalk. Throughout the exhibition a visual timeline will trace not only Sam’s career from the late 1970s to today, but also track changing styles through time; exploring the relationship between fashion shoots and the street in influencing contemporary hair styling.

To be published at the same time as the exhibition, there will be a book by the same name, Hair by Sam McKnight with texts by Tim Blanks, Alexander Fury, Amanda Harlech, Nick Knight, Camilla Morton, Anna-Marie Solowij, Jerry Stafford and commentary by Sam McKnight featuring images spanning his entire career. Richly illustrated, it features photographs by leading fashion photographers and styles commissioned by Vivienne Westwood, Balmain, Chanel, and many others.  A unique reference book that offers a glamorous tour through the past forty years and a style bible for glorious looks, the book is published by Rizzoli and priced at £35.00.

The exhibition is curated by Shonagh Marshall and exhibition design is by Michael Howells.

Jun 22, 2013

The Belly of the Beast

While Martin Magiela made a splash in spring 2009 with his wig jackets (below), I was unaware of his Fall 2005 Artisinal Collection that included a jacket, top and collar utilizing the reverse of wigs. By reversing the wigs, the patterning and decoration produce a wonderful tactile texture, formed by the wigs' interior stitching and elastic construction.


"Artifice is a standard tool of the fashion system, but Margiela is uniquely adept and willing to expose it for all to see. Just as Margiela turns a garment inside-out to flaunt its construction, so the artifice behind contemporary beauty itself is revealed and hence called into question."1

While Margiela is no longer involved with his namesake company, while he was a designer he consistently questioned orthodox notions of beauty and attraction. In both his 2005 and 2009 collections those questions relate to the seduction and revulsion of hair. Sure, this is not real hair. Rather it's fake hair but with the finest level of workmanship applied to it, thus calling into question an essential paradox of luxury - that its value rarely lies in anything of literal material worth. 

Are these wiggy fashion objects really something we should want to wear? Margiela taps into cultural anxieties about taste, attractiveness, and being "cool." Oh no, could fake really be better than real? What would it mean if i wanted to wear human hair? Am I grotesque? Am I hip? Is this fashion? These objects sit uneasily on a narrow ledge between that special and elusive sensation of desire that is called up by fashion and the revulsion fed by the common subtext of self-hatred we feel towards our body, its features and its functions.

1. "Mind Games" by Alex Fury,  December 11 2008, showstudio.com

Sep 11, 2012

Fashion Week do


Behind-the-scenes photo from the Spring 2013 Thakoon show. Photo by Sunny Vandevelde.

Nov 7, 2011

Broken Eyelashes

"On the outside, it’s the little mistakes or defaults that really make someone beautiful. The cliché of beauty — skinny and perfect — becomes boring for me very quickly. But I think we’re going back to a period when it’s O.K. to show some mistakes." ~ Inge Grognard
for A.F. Vandevorst, Fall 1998

The cover of A MAGAZINE curated by Haider Ackermann, 2005

I just love these collaborative images by make-up artist Inge Grognard & photographer Ronald Stoops. This cutting-edge fashion imagery duo have collaborated with designers such as Martin Margiela and the Antwerp Six (Dries Van Noten, Ann Demeulemeester, Dirk Bikkembergs, Walter Van Beirendonck – W&LT, Dirk Van Saene, and Marina Yee) - "a band of Belgian designers dedicated to a radically deconstructed vision of dress." Here I've selected images based on eyelashes, hairs that remind of wishes, fairies, flirting and tears.

for A.F. Vandevorst, Spring 2007

From Makeup, Grognard’s book, published in 1998

From Grognard’s website

From Grognard’s website

for Martin Margiela, Spring 2010

Oct 10, 2011

Andy Warhol's Wig - a defining art object

"Warhol's wig depended on him. Abandoned in the vitrine, the prosthesis looks like a flattened jellyfish, a splayed broom, an apology." ~ Wayne Koestenbaum for Artforum 1998.
 Self-portrait (Fright Wig), 1986

Many identify Andy Warhol by his trademark wig, a variously grey to silver contraption that sat uneasily upon his head. And sat it did, rather uncomfortably, with no pretension of being real. The ubiquitous two-tone hairpiece was not a simple fashion item, but rather a fundamental device for the creation and self-mythologized persona of "Andy Warhol," ultimately rendering him brand-like.

Warhol, says Baudrillard: “never aspired to anything but this machinic celebrity, a celebrity without consequence which leaves no trace” – the “perfect artifical personality;” “a kind of hologram;” or “otherness raised to perfection.”1

Warhol's self-created "otherness" was achieved, in part, through a delineation of his image via "the wig." But there was not simply one wig, there were hundreds of wigs, as it turns out. Andy never threw a wig away and when he died in 1987, they were found in an assortment of boxes and envelopes. There are 40 alone archived in the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburg, PA.


Paige Powell, John Sex and Men in Andy Warhol Wigs, 1983.
©2010 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts /
Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

The wigs were made from hair imported from Italy and sewn by a New York wig maker.  Labels on the inside crown read, "HAIRPIECE, Original by Paul." It was one of these that Warhol framed and gave to Jean Michel Basquiat as an artwork. 
Thursday, December 19, 1985
Tina Chow called and said there was a dinner for Jean Michel at 9:00, just really small. Jean Michel had his mother and her friend there. I brought him a present, one of my own hairpieces. He was shocked. One of my old ones. Framed. I put '"83" on it but I don't know when it was from. It's one of my Paul Bochicchio wigs. It was a "Paul Original."
Wigs are personal and rather disgusting, but Warhol's instinct to give Basquiat one of his, as if it were an ordinary collectible item, turned out to be quite astute. In 2006, a Warhol wig sold for $10,800 at a Christie's auction.


Warhol began to wear wigs in the 1950s to cover up his early male pattern baldness and gradually graying hair. (He also had his nose "planed" in 1956.) The first wig was a mousy brown, but he moved into yellow-blond, then platinum, and ultimately settled on shades of grey/silver, wearing the wigs with his existing darker hair sticking out at the bottom. Warhol settled on grey because if you always appear old no one knows how old you really are.
The wigs changed and slipped.
The thing about the wig is that the more it looked like a wig, the less it looked like a wig. Was it a wig? Because the wigs that look like wigs are the ones that attempt to look like real hair, and Andy's never looked like a wig."
~ Kicking the Pricks, Derek Jarman

Despite the obviousness of the sham, when Warhol's wig was snatched from his head on October 30, 1985 it was his worst nightmare come true:
"I guess I can't put off talking about it any longer. Okay, let's get it over with. Wednesday. The day my biggest nightmare came true... I'd been signing America books for an hour or so when this girl in line handed me hers to sign and then she - did what she did... I don't know what held me back from pushing her over the balcony. She was so pretty and well-dressed. I guess I called her a bitch or something and asked how she could do it. But it's okay, I don't care - if a picture gets published, it does. There were so many people with cameras. Maybe it'll be on the cover of Details, I don't know... It was so shocking. It hurt. Physically... And I had just gotten another magic crystal which is supposed to protect me and keep things like this from happening..."2
Self-Portrait (Passport Photograph with Altered Nose), 1956
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.

But Warhol's wig was more than just a cover-up for baldness or a device to devise a distinct identity;  the wig had roots in the deep insecurities of the Catholic, homosexual Andy Warhol. In a 2001 issue of American Art, Bradford Collins describes a number of ways that Warhol was tortured by his appearance, describing Warhol as having an "image of himself as severely flawed."3 Warhol's desire to alter his appearance related to a belief that ugliness was a barrier to both fame and to erotic encounters.

While on the one hand he wanted to appear attractive to men, he also understood that the commercial success he so desired required him to appear less gay. "Emile de Antonio, had convinced him that if he wanted to succeed in the New York art world - then both antibourgeois and homophobic - he would not only have to hide his commercial activities to conform to the profile of the avant-garde artist, but would also have to follow the example of Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns and give up his 'swish' behavior and 'try to look straight.'"4 

But what signifies beauty? or gayness? Warhol began to explore cultural notions of beauty, identity,  and refashioning ones appearance early in his career. The idea of the "make-over" can be seen not only in a series of Before and After paintings that Warhol created in the early 1960s based on classified ads selling nose jobs, but also in a doctored passport photo from 1956. Its hard not to read Before and After as a "deflected and disguised self-portrait,"5 knowing that Warhol had had his own nose re-shaped. Three other works at this time, Wigs (1960), Bald? (1960) and Nine Ads (1960), also point to both a personal concern with appearance modification and broader paradigms of beauty. However, it is camp that "served as the theatrical "bracketing" that made confession into a social event, and rendered the marketing of body transformations into art."6

 Before and After, 1961, MOMA

Turns out there were many ways Warhol sought to "compensate for his looks. Art dealer Ivan Karp recalled that when he brought collectors to Warhol's studio in 1961 the artist often wore theatrical masks, apparently to hide his skin problems. 'I don't think he was comfortable with the way he looked, because he had a terrible complexion at the time,' Karp said."7

Thus the wig was more than a wig. It symbolized what Warhol wanted to become as well as what he felt compelled to hide. The style icon Daphne Guinness speaks about how clothes can be used, like armor, to hide behind, to protect oneself, even as they ultimately garner attention. It was in this same manner that Warhol's wig allowed him to hide in plain sight.




1. Dr. Gerry Coulter, Jean Baudrillard’s Andy Warhol Survives Euro Pop, Euro Art and Beyond, Fall 2008.
2. www.warholstars.org/chron/
3. Bradford R. Collins
, "Dick Tracy and the Case of Warhol's Closet: A Psychoanalytic Detective Story," American Art (Autumn, 2001).
4.. Ibid.

5. Caroline A. Jones, Machine in the Studio, University of Chicago Press, 1996, page 225.
6. Caroline A. Jones, Machine in the Studio, University of Chicago Press, 1996, page 225-6.
7. Bradford R. Collins
, "Dick Tracy and the Case of Warhol's Closet: A Psychoanalytic Detective Story," American Art (Autumn, 2001).




Oct 3, 2011

Fashion's Allusion to Hair

Alexander McQueen - Coat
Eshu, autumn/winter 2000–2001
Black synthetic hair


Martin Margiela  - 'Wig Coat' - Spring 2009

Riccardo Tisci for Givenchy - Fall 2009

Pierre Balmain  - Fall 2011

Steffie Christians - Spring 2012

Jean-Charles de Castelbajac - Spring/Summer 2009

Neil Barrett - Fall 2011

New Balance - Pony Hair sneakers - 2009

Sep 10, 2011

My Little Pony

Masaya Kushino - Lung-la - 2009 Collection

Ok, working on verifying whether these are horse or human hair, but either way they are just tooooo fabulous!

Jun 13, 2011

Isabella Blow - ever idiosyncratic, absurd, and impractical

Photo by Sue Webster

The amazing Isabella Blow is wearing a "hair" ensemble. It is September 9, 2000.
She is standing alongside artist Tim Noble outside the the Modern Art Gallery in London where the Tim Noble and Sue Webster artwork British Wildlife is on display. This image was recently published in Lauren Goldstein Crowe's book A Life in Fashion Isabella Blow.

Jun 9, 2011

Excuse me, you have a bear in your hair


Wigs beyond words! Nagi Noda has transcended the taxidermy trend by rendering her furry creatures in hair rather than hides. Nothing short of astounding, this is absurdest-grotesque comedy at its best. 


Nagi Noda is a Japanese video director who has recently collaborated with artist Mark Ryden on a fashion label called "Broken Label."


May 5, 2011

Hidden hair

Alexander McQueen - Coat
Pink silk satin printed in thorn pattern with encapsulated human hair
From the collection of Isabella Blow courtesy of the Hon. Daphne Guinness
Photograph by Sølve Sundsbø

For his MA Fashion Design course at Central Saint Martins in London, Alexander McQueen hid human hairs into ensembles he designed for his 1992 graduation collection Jack the Ripper Stalks His Victims. For example, he sealed hair from view by sewing it into the lining of a frock coat (currently on view in the Metropolitan Museum's exhibition Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty). McQueen's early collections related to the darker tendencies of Victorian era, such as death and the underbelly of society.

“The inspiration behind the hair came from Victorian times when prostitutes would sell theirs for kits of hair locks, which were bought by people to give to their lovers. I used it as my signature label with locks of hair in Perspex. In the early collections, it was my own hair.”
~Alexander McQueen
Time Out (London), September 24–October 1, 1997

The fashion historian Caroline Evans pointed out, in her book Fashion at the Edge, that by encasing locks of his own hair, "the themes of sex, death, and commerce intertwined...creating an object which was both souvenir and memento mori; he had the idea of giving himself to the collection."

Another interpretation for McQueen's inclusion of hair in this collection was made by Louise Wilson, McQueen’s teacher at Central Saint Martins. Ms. Wilson remembers that because one of McQueen’s relatives owned an inn that housed a victim of Jack the Ripper, the collection "was linked to his mother; it was linked to her interest in genealogy." And what is more fitting than to use hair, actual DNA.
~

Elena Fajt, visual artist and assistant professor of fashion design at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia, has also used hair in clothing. Her focus is the actual revulsion people feel about the context of hair. While considered beautiful and sexually attractive on the head, it becomes reviled once removed to another context. Her project Hairsense/Hair Dress explores the idea that hair is a renewable fiber that could one day be considered an acceptable material for fashion designers. Well if the Project Runway judges' reaction to Chris March's use of hair in his collection for the Season 4 finale in 2008 is any indication, we're not quite there yet. He lost....by a hair.

Little Black Dress, 2001 - Human hair, wool Handwritings, 2001 - Human hair, wool