Read + Write + Report
Home | Start a blog | About Orble | FAQ | Blogs | Writers | My Orble | Login

Eat French Bread - July 2007

Art and Fashion

July 23rd 2007 13:38
coco chanel salvador dali
One of the most famous meeting points between fashion and art was with surrealist artist Salvador Dalí. “I am madly in love with myself,” he said, “I live only to pose.” Pictured above with his friend Coco Chanel, Dalí found he was more accepted by the fashion/society circles than the artistic/intellectual ones, who criticised his perceived exhibitionism, vanity and love of publicity.

He dressed with exceptional care and expense, and his instantly recognisable self-image (that moustache!) was intrinsic to his fame. He had a lifelong obsession with sexual ambiguity and often experimented with cross-dressing; a
elsa schiaparelli
favorite combination being a silk blouse with pearls. He saw fashion as offering possibilities for escape, transformation and creative aesthetic play. He also collaborated with his friend, the celebrated couturier Elsa Schiaparelli, (left) on a number of surrealistic fashion creations.

Even today many continue to assert that the thing we call ‘art’ does not include the realm of fashion. Fashion is at times classified ‘design’ or ‘craft’ rather than ‘art for art’s sake’, but this is a very Western notion. In other cultures, like much of Asia, such a dichotomy does not exist. Before the Meiji restoration in Japan, the best approximation of the word ‘art’ was katachi, which actually translates to ‘form and design’. While art in the West attempts to destroy or differentiate from everydayness, the equivalent in Japan is something more synonymous with function and life.


artforum issey miyake 1982 february
Since their reign in the 1980s, avant-garde Japanese fashion designers like Issey Miyake, Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garçons, and Yohji Yamamoto have been hailed by many (especially in their home country) as artists. But ambiguity remains. While the (somewhat controversial) February 1982 cover of Artforum magazine featured a sculptural Miyake creation, he disclaims the role of the artist: “Fashion design is not art. I don’t think it should be considered an art, or I an artist. I am not making clothes to have them displayed in a museum.”

In the West, the fashion designer who has most visibly blurred the boundaries between art and fashion is her holiness Viv Westwood (below). She is said to make the rich look poor and the poor look rich, and her clothes involve experimental techniques that achieve unexpected aesthetic results, transforming the shape of the body and the very meaning of dress. They are as thought provoking as she is, raising questions of etiquette, history, sex, sexuality, gender, politics, ugliness and beauty.

vivienne westwood

Interestingly, Westwood was once a vehement defender of fashion as an artistic enterprise, but according to this article from the Guardian, she is now saying she ‘disagrees with everything she used to say’. She’s now an anti-consumerist and has written a manifesto called Active Resistance to Propaganda. Structured as a dialogue between such characters as Diogenes the Cynic, Alice, Pinocchio, the Mad Hatter and Aristotle, it calls for people to watch less television, read more books and buy less things. It also mounts an assault on the theory that art is subjective.Active Resistance to Propaganda.

vivienne westwood gold shoes
Over the last two decades, fashion has featured increasingly in art galleries, with a number of very successful exhibitions dedicated to the work of single designers or icons. I took this photograph of Westwood’s gold stiletto pumps with multiple tongues at the exhibition of her work in London’s Victoria and Albert. The show toured globally and she enjoyed having her work displayed, but that is not to say she approves of it. “Clothes are to be worn, not stared at in cabinets,” she says.

The justification of the museum is the idea of art’s quality of endurance - a quality that fashion lacks, being by definition something that changes for the sake of change. Jean Cocteau said, “art produces ugly things which frequently become beautiful with time - fashion, on the other hand, produces beautiful things which always become ugly with time.” In the Guardian article, Westwood says that fashion cannot be art because it is ephemeral - she finds it “annoying” that you can design what you consider to be the perfect pair of trousers, and then three seasons later you are required to design another pair.

Some are calling Westwood a sham for shunning consumerism while charging hundreds of dollars for mass-produced commodities carrying her name. But really all she is saying is that people need less than they are told they do, and she wants people to think more actively. She will always believe in dressing well: she says good clothes are life-enhancing and form self-expression and communication. But if I could sit
anna piaggi
Oscar Wilde advised 'one should either be a work of art, or wear a work of art.' Anna Piaggi does both.
over earl grey tea and cucumber sandwiches with Dame Westwood I would love to ask her how useful it is to insist on a distinction between ‘fashion’ and ‘art’.

There is the argument about commercialism. Some say that because fashion is a consumerist enterprise it lacks the ‘purity’ of real art. Fashion certainly matters more economically: although there is expensive high-end low-scale production somewhat comparable to the art world, fashion’s employment, industrial production and global trade is far beyond that of the art world. But many fashion designers are less involved with the business strategies behind their work than certain entrepreneurial artists, and art can acquire investment value and store wealth in ways that fashion rarely can - so it’s a slippery distinction.

While art at its best broadens perspectives and provides a sense of connectedness or new possibility; fashion at its worst preys on people’s insecurities and vanities, and makes big profits by churning out uniformity. But fashion has moved from a privilege for the elite to an accessible realm for most, while the art world is by comparison closed and exclusive, requiring a higher degree of education to access it.

Art is not ‘practical’, but neither is fashion. Roland Barthes tells us that beyond protection, modesty and adornment, we dress ourselves to carry out signifying activity: “In reality fashion is never functional, never utilitarian. If women bought dresses only when they needed them, if a society bought clothes only because of wear and tear, there wouldn’t be any fashion.” Indeed, the urge to decorate the body is one of our most primal - according to Thomas Carlyle, the first purpose of clothes “was not warmth or decency, but ornament” and “among wild people, we find tattooing and painting even prior to clothes.”

leigh bowery
Fashion designer, performance artist, nightclub sensation and model for the painter Lucien Freud, Leigh Bowery (left) believed that every time he went out, it was a performance. He said “I think of myself as a canvas” and Boy George branded him “art on legs.” His life project was his body, which he distorted and thwarted through the most outrageous self-costuming involving extensions, padding, binding, corsetry, gaffer-taping and piercing. He saw such modification as not only a way of transforming himself but of claiming ownership of his body, which he felt was under constant threat of control from external societal forces.

The most iconic image of him is the one in his orange spot creation, where the large polka dots extend from his jacket, shoes, scarf and trousers to his flesh so that his painted face and hands became one with the clothing. He is his costume, and the ‘natural’ body and ‘constructed’ attire are merged so that his performative self is all there is. He is heroic for putting the banal, beautiful and grotesque side by side, and blurring art, life, performance and fashion. Beyond narcissistic posing, such self-costuming is a public service which exhibits the marvelous in the mundane and shows that art can be made anywhere from anything.


“If Boticelli were alive today he'd be working for Vogue"
(Peter Ustinov)




70
Vote
   


ganguro girls

July 11th 2007 02:04
ganguro pink

When the ganguro (“black face”) style emerged amongst Japanese teenage girls in the 1990s it caused a stir. Long bleached and colored hair, vinyl, hot pink, sequins, animal prints, think eyeliner, feathers, fur, glitter and faux flowers started to pop up across the nation, as did fake tan salons. The fashion peaked in popularity around 2000 but ganguro girls can still be found in the arcades and sticker photo booths of Tokyo’s Shibuya district.

While it was seen as a subversive style, counter to the culture’s conventional notions of beauty and femininity, elaborate costume and face altering is actually firmly rooted in Japanese tradition. Noh masks are intrinsic to the kabuki performances and geishas plaster themselves in white makeup before painting high eyebrows and staining the lips blood red.

japanese white face
As early as the seventh century, women of the upper classes were whitening their skin. It was believed a lady of quality was fair, and women stayed indoors to avoid sunlight. They began to power their faces white and then moved on to more complicated procedures involving bleaching and white led, which had devastating effects.

(In the Heian period eyebrows were also routinely removed and teeth and gums were blackened with a mix of ferrous oxide, tea and sake. They say led poisoning induces rage and aggression [the Romans drank from led cups so that might explain all the warfare and arrogance]... Imagine it: graceful and frail Japanese ladies with stone white faces, no eyebrows and black teeth, starting to get very angry.)

After a series of led poisoning deaths the government banished the face-whitening ingredients in 1870. But many whitening products are available today as the Japanese continued to value pale skin, which originally signified being rich enough to not have to work outside, like the weather-beaten peasants. Who had deep golden tans like the ganguro girls are lining up for at solariums right now.


ganguro sticker photo


“If man were never to fade away … but lingered on forever in the world, how things would lose their power to move us. The most precious thing in life is uncertainty”
(Yoshida Kenko in his Essays in Idleness, 1330s)




81
Vote
   


Beijing Bubbles

July 2nd 2007 04:45
The flourishing contemporary art scene in China has been getting increased global attention in recent years. Less recognised is its underground music scene...

joyside
A gem of the Sydney Film Festival, Beijing Bubbles is a documentary of Punk Rock in the country’s capital. Berlin filmmakers Susanne Messmer and George Lindt said they had watched the punk attitude be dispersed into commercial fashion in Germany, but were enthused to find an authentic spirit thriving in the world’s fastest developing country. Chinese society is known for valuing traditions, efficiency, social advancement, family honour and the accumulation of prosperity. In this society punk has found it’s right to exist. The underground scene is explored through five bands who have diverse styles and approaches to music, but all position themselves outside the culture they grew up in.

The raucous Joyside is fronted by Bia Yuan (pictured) who only wants “to sing, drink and fuck” and says, "there is no use to be a hard-working man." The band members have lived together in grubby units and damp basements on the outskirts of Beijing, drinking and listening to The Dead Boys, The Sex Pistols and The Germs all day long. In September 2004 they released their first studio album Drunk Is Beautiful. When asked what he would do if he wasn’t in a band, Yuan says that he would go to Africa to feed the lions, or dance with the devil.

The girl band Hang On The Box (left) discuss being out of synch with the wider society, and how their creativity thrives from that. "We need a quiet mood to think about music" they say. They released their first album Yellow Banana in 2002 and went on a world tour shortly after. But in Beijing, bassist Yilina says, nobody knows who they are and the money they get for playing gigs only just covers their taxi ride and dinner.

The pensive Liu Donghong of the blues combo Shazi takes filmmakers on a tour of Tiananmen Square and points out the Great Hall of the People saying “a lot of bad ideas come out of that building.” The band went into retreat for three subsequent summers to the mountains west of Beijing, renting an old temple cheaply and playing music all day, returning to the city when a gig was lined up. In 2001 they released their first album The Stars Fall On My Head. Donghong named the band after the Chinese word for sand - in a country like China, a person might feel like a minuscule grain of sand among millions of others, but one grain of sand can wreak havoc when trapped in the workings of a machine.

"I have isolated myself for a long time," says Yiliqi, who formulated his band T9 after getting bored of performing angry Grunge music. He began to draw on the Mongolian musical influences that came from his father’s side, and was taught overtone singing (a throat technique that produces two or more sounds at once) as well as Mongolian instruments like the Tobushuur and the Morinhuur. Live footage from T9 gigs shows the effect to be poignant and powerful.

joyside
New Pants draw heavily from The Ramones with melodious but spontaneous sounds. The Hong Kong music magazine MCB cited their first (self-titled) album as one of the 10 most important Asian records of the 90s. Their success is surprising in a place where colourful perky saccharine pop songs are pumped out of restaurants, karaoke clubs and bars with very little variety. But like all the bands in the film, New Pants can’t live on their music, and singer/guitarist Peng Lei takes the filmmakers to his day job - a toy shop (which stocks, of course, Ramones figurines).

Joining the growing genre of rock docs, Beijing Bubbles is an exciting and intimate document of society and subculture in China, and left me formulating schemes to get there in the next 12 months, before the Olympics change everything.
56
Vote
   


More Posts
2 Posts
2 Posts
4 Posts
83 Posts dating from August 2006
Email Subscription
Receive e-mail notifications of new posts on this blog:

ag's Blogs

0 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
0 Post(s)
0 Vote(s)
0 Comment(s)
0 Post(s)
Moderated by ag
Copyright © 2006 2007 2008 On Topic Media PTY LTD. All Rights Reserved. Design by Vimu.com.
On Topic Media ZPages: Sydney |  Melbourne |  Brisbane |  London |  Birmingham |  Leeds     [ Advertise ] [ Contact Us ] [ Privacy Policy ]