Showing posts with label Masters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Masters. Show all posts

Thursday, April 9, 2020

The Artist as Muse

I always find it interesting when I notice patterns.  They may not necessarily be a trend just whatever catches my own personal eye and resonates.

Inspired  by....ROY LICHTENSTEIN


"Maybe" by Roy Lichtenstein, 1965
Makeup Artist Rommy Najor Portrait Series w. Nina Agdal

Inspired by....Giacomo Balla

Considered the father of Futurist Fashion, Balla began designing textiles and suits around 1912. You can see Balla's influence practically everywhere now especially in Athleisure and Performance clothes.



I see Pucci in this one.



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Thursday, September 26, 2013

Master | Issey Miyake

Blow UP Dress: Before

Blow UP Dress: After

A/W 1987

Issey Miyake and Irving Penn: Visual Dialogue Exhibition
{patternity}

Monday, August 12, 2013

Icons In Knit

Yves St. Laurent circa 1971
{via}

Sonia Rykiel

Ottavio Missoni with granddaughter Margherita Missoni
{via}



Sunday, October 14, 2012

for the love of knitting

This video from Mulberry proudly honors not only craft but some of the "real" people who make your clothes.  Without a doubt the sweaters these ladies knit are super expensive but in a world of same-same Zara, Joe Fresh, and H&M knock-offs its nice to know there are moments we're allowed to simply appreciate how a designer's vision is precisely played out.






Sunday, August 7, 2011

Alexander McQueen | Tortured Beauty

Within the larger context of mythology, the story of the tortured artist is perhaps one of the more glorified.  Slivers of greatness enshrined by our voyeurism remind us just how delicate the human condition can be.  Does struggling for one's art make one a genius or does the struggle taint genius, crush it even, by the inevitable tragedy lurking within?

In the fashion world, the word "genius" gets tossed around a lot.  So much so in fact that I cringe every time I hear it and I'm quite sure hardly anyone knows how to identify the real deal.  Yet genius does exist and it should be reserved only for the type of brilliance that Alexander McQueen possessed.

McQueen was an incendiary talent who oozed molten lava and shot flames straight through the obsidian core of an industry that guts and deserts people as quickly as they clamour to praise them.

I saw "Savage Beauty" at the MET for the second time last week and I had one of those rare moments of lost time.  I thought I would pass through quickly on this go-around since I was with a large group of co-workers but instead I meandered; studying each seam, each choice the curators made of what to place next to what, the choices of music and clips from certain shows, the choice of manequins, the respect given to his collaborators who helped flesh out the story he wanted to tell.

The genius of McQueen was contagious: to those who worked with him, to those who put together the show, and for a brief moment, I think, made even the least creative spectator understand the heavy load he must have carried every moment of his life.  To possess such talent seems enviable from an outsider's perspective but I suspect there's a fine line between obeying one's deepest creative inclinations and succumbing to the dark caverns of one's mind...