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The Boat is Leaking. The Captain Lied Fondazione Prada Venice

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“The Boat is Leaking. The Captain Lied.”

 Fondazione Prada Venice 

“The Boat is Leaking. The Captain Lied.” is a transmedia exhibition project, the result of an ongoing, in-depth exchange between writer and filmmaker Alexander Kluge, artist Thomas Demand, stage and costume designer Anna Viebrock and curator Udo Kittelmann. The exhibition unfolds on three storeys of the 18th century palazzo – the ground floor and the two main ones – and include photographic and film works, as well as spatial settings and loans from private and public collections.

The long process which led to the realization of this project is not only the result of discussions and exchanges between the authors involved in it, but also the outcome of a misunderstanding. The sharing of a reproduction of a painting by Angelo Morbelli Giorni… ultimi! (1883), generated in the three artists and in the curator different interpretations of its subject, which depicts a group of elderly destitute men within the Pio Albergo Trivulzio in Milan. More specifically, the portrayed individuals had been mistaken for retired sailors spending their old age at the hostel. This suggestion not only caused the marine metaphor in the exhibition title, inspired by Leonard Cohen’s song Everybody Knows (1988), but also the choice to devote a monographic room to Morbelli, hosting seven of his works. 

Quoting William Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar “Why, now blow wind, swell billow, and swim bark! The storm is up, and all is on the hazard”, Udo Kittelmann underlines how this collaboration generated out of a “shared awareness, both on an emotional and theoretical level, of the critical aspects of present times and the complexity of the world we live in”. In a dialogue of polyphonic references and constellations between the contributions of each artist, the exhibition spans film, art and theatre media. The confluence of image spaces and scene settings for a variety of atmospheres transforms the historic palazzo of Ca’ Corner della Regina into a metaphorical site for the identification of the worlds we live in and our personal attitudes towards them. The exhibition aims to provide comprehensive insight into the respective production of Alexander Kluge, Thomas Demand and Anna Viebrock, whose artistic endeavours have always extended beyond the aesthetic and imaginative, and were conceived with political and historical intentions. All three artists reveal themselves as pathfinders and clue seekers, witnesses and chroniclers of times past and present.


Out of this, an exhibition is generated, intended as a space for experiences and encounters. This visually powerful, multi-layered environment bestows expression and meaning on the everyday and on the worlds of yesterday and today, between apparent normality and catastrophe, in a society divided between lust for life and loss of trust, extreme distress and never-ending hope.

As stated by Kittelmann, “It is a particularly lucky coincidence that Alexander Kluge’s filmic production, Thomas Demand’s photographic work and Anna Viebrock’s stage settings are brought together in this collective exhibition concept, melding what are usually distinct artistic forms of expression. Until now their different creative fields have prevented them from engaging in this kind of symbiotic collaboration, even though they know one another personally and have often exchanged ideas.”

In “The Boat is Leaking. The Captain Lied.” each visitor can create its own narration in complete freedom, physically and conceptually moving through the visual imagery of the three artists. Through this, three commonly accepted ideas are questioned: the traditional separation between spectators and theatre set designs, the reduction of filmic products to mere exhibited objects and the visual isolation where artworks are usually presented within a show.
The exhibition “The Boat is Leaking. The Captain Lied.” will be accompanied by an illustrated book edited by Udo Kittelmann and published by Fondazione Prada. Made up of three volumes, it includes the English and Italian editions of “The Great Hour of Kong. A Chronicle of Connections” by Alexander Kluge and the catalogue of the project with essays, poems and texts by Devin A. Fore, Niccolò Gravina, Udo Kittelmann, Alexander Kluge, Rachel Kushner, Ben Lerner, Helmut Lethen, Thomas Oberender and Aurora Scotti.

text: http://www.fondazioneprada.org,
images: brankopopovicblog


























Design Academy Eindhoven Graduation 2017

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Graduation Show 2017 - MINED 'Digging deep is digging hard'

MINED – the overall theme for the Graduation Show 2017 – indicates how individual designers build on intelligence and empathy, and dig deep into themselves and into every available resource to share their ideas with the world.
During the Dutch Design Week I have visited the DAE graduation and had the pleasure to meet many talented designer who, as the theme implied, openly shared their stories.
In the following post you can take a look at some of my encounters.

www.designacademy.nl
Dasha Tsapenko



Dasha Tsapenko

Joel Blanco
Dorota Gazy

Dorota Gazy

Dorota Gazy

Ilse Meulendijks

Mirjam de Bruijn

Thom Bindels

Kristofers Reidzāns

Kristofers Reidzāns

Kristofers Reidzāns

Fransje Gimbrere

Fransje Gimbrere

Gyalpo Batstra

Josef Trojan

Kelly van Duijnhoven

Kelly van Duijnhoven

Razma Hassani

Juliette Delforge

Huang JianDa

Julica Morlok

Ines de Peuter

Ines de Peuter

Ines de Peuter

Jonathan Ho

Jonathan Ho

Melani de Luca

Audrey Large

Audrey Large

Julian Chien-Yi Lim

Julian Chien-Yi Lim

Kim Hou

Kim Hou

Billie van Katwijk

Billie van Katwijk

Billie van Katwijk

Ekatarina Galetski

Ekatarina Galetski

Ekatarina Galetski

Marjolijn Senders

Alissa Rees

Mies Loogman

Fleur Hulleman

Peter Cornelis Müller

Peter Cornelis Müller

Jella van Eck

Jasper Luijten

Cécilia Maarawi

Cécilia Maarawi

Laura Mangone

Laura Mangone

Yildou ter Beek

Marie Caye

Corine van Grevenbroek

Johan Viladrich

Florence Louisy

Ottonie von Roeder

Jiayu Wu

Aram Lee

Doekie van Nuil

Jessie Derogy

Agnieszka Mazur

Kostas Lambridis

Nadine Botha

Nadine Botha

Crafting Plastics! Studio launches 100% Biobased Eyewear

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100% Biobased Eyewear Fighting Global Warming 

In November 2017 Crafting Plastics! Studio will launch its first-of-a-kind eyewear collection — the world’s first bioplastic designer frames, created from a new generation of plastics made completely from 100% renewable plant-based materials.

Crafting Plastics! Studio was founded in 2016 by Vlasta Kubušová and Miroslav Kral and is today based between Berlin and Bratislava. The studio was established following a Master’s thesis exploring sustainable and transparent production processes in response to the fashion industry’s exploitative practices. Motivated by the opportunity to develop a product from its very origin, and remaining in control of its entire lifestyle, Crafting Plastics! Studio is revolutionising the properties and the value of the material we know as plastic.

Over the past three years, Crafting Plastics! Studio has been working closely with materials scientists from the Slovak Technical University to create a new form of oil-free, carbon neutral bioplastic material. Strong, malleable and for the duration of its use, the bioplastic decomposes completely once placed in industrial compost, leaving no impact on the environment.

The first manifestation of the material’s properties takes the form of a limited edition designer eyewear range.

About the collection:
The first ready-to-wear eyewear collection is produced purely from our own bioplastic material that we spent the last two years bringing to perfection. Thanks to its pure organic nature, the eyewear can be disposed directly into compost. The material is coloured with natural pigments, such as algae, earth or food pigments.
This eyewear collection comes in 4 colorways (nude, mysterious blue, bohemian earth, orange seaweed) and 4 unisex styles. Thanks to our 3D printing technology, we are able to reduce the amount of waste during disposal of this material up to 90% in comparison to other traditional technologies.

Link to Kickstarter campaign: http://kck.st/2xKXXK0

Crafting Plastics! Studio
https://www.craftingplastics.com/
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The Vulgar - Fashion Redefined - Modemuseum Hasselt

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The Vulgar - Fashion Redefined on show at Modemuseum Hasselt

30.09.2017 - 12.01.2018 

The word ‘vulgar’ was originally used in the English-speaking world to characterize a social class and to describe anything that was commonly prevalent. Over time, this neutral description became an insult. Vulgarity became associated with pretension and ambition, with aspirations to special privileges. And it still conjures up negative connotations – words like ‘provocative’, ‘over the top’ and ‘common’ spring to mind.

Judith Clark has curated and designed the exhibition around 12 new definitions of the word by psychoanalyst Adam Phillips. Arranged around thematic categories, such as ‘Too Much’, ‘Showing Off’ and ‘Extreme Bodies’, Clark and Phillips enter into a dialogue that accompanies the visitor through the exhibition. Creations by Walter Van Beirendonck, Christian Dior, Karl Lagerfeld for Chloé, Prada, Vivienne Westwood, Louis Vuitton and Givenchy amongst others illustrate this complex idea. The exhibition combines historical costume, couture and ready-to-wear fashion with every exhibit reflecting certain aspects of the vulgar. The garments illustrate the instability of taste: what was once equated with vulgarity is re-conjured by designers to become the height of fashion.

Mantua dresses with their extremely large skirts and dramatic silhouettes, which were worn at the English court in the mid-eighteenth century are presented next to creations by contemporary designers. The famous ‘Mondrian dress’ by Yves Saint Laurent engages with copies and reworked versions, and the popular designs by Moschino are confronted with Andy Warhol inspired 1960's Souper dress.

This unique and acclaimed exhibition was previously shown at The Barbican Art Gallery in London and at the Winterpalais in Vienna. For the exhibition in Hasselt new looks from the museum’s collection will be added. ‘The Vulgar’ at Modemuseum Hasselt- located in a former convent- promises to be a provocative and engaging experience.

www.modemuseumhasselt.be





























Goran Sidjimovski - Liminal Lines

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Goran Sidjimovski is a Berlin-based knitwear designer with affinity for experimenting with structures and yarns. His work is strongly influenced by theoretical concepts, meanings and words interpretation, and pushes the boundaries of what knitting can be.

He graduated at the University of Applied Sciences in Berlin in September 2017 and during his placement year interned at the leading flat-knitting machine manufacturer company Stoll. With his graduate collection Liminial Lines he was selected as 1 of 6 graduates worldwide by the Textile Museum in Tilburg to work on a collaborative knit project.

The graduate collection Liminal Lines explores the concept of liminality and interprets its discursive meanings (transition, transformation, ambiguity, in-betweenness) from a contemporary perspective in relation to gender and querness.

The liminality is seen as standing on the threshold. It is flexible and does not have a fixed identity or direction. Sometimes it bends to the left, sometimes to the right and sometimes at both sides at the same time. By working on, and with its own disorientation, it discovers several new orientations and inhabits them partially, interchangeably or even simultaneously. At times it just stands besides the threshold and reflects upon what it actually means to stand on a threshold. The observed queer is aware of the violable binary presence and does not try to move in one strict direction. It understands the feminine and masculine not as opposites, but as inhabiting the same space at the same time. They does not see liminality as a transition with direction, but as a life-long process for critical analysis of hegemonic vicious norms.

www.goransidjimovski.com

Lookbook credits

photo: Carlitos Trujullo
model: Fritz alm @ Viva models Berlin
hair & mua: Gianluca Venerdini













Gucci SS 2018 campaign

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Ignasi Monreal created a Utupian Fantasy artworks for Gucci’s S/S 2018 Campaign
The advertising campaign “Utopian Fantasy” features surreal digital images inspired by eras of Renaissance to Surrealism and paying tribute to three elements of Earth, Sea and Sky. The campaign images will be officially released in January 2018. 















Sanchez-Kane Spring/Summer 2018

Change the System at Boijmans Van Beuningen

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Viktor & Rolf

'Change the System'features projects by designers who want to change the world, either step by step or in one big gesture. With work by more than fifty designers and artists, the exhibition gives a vision of contemporary design’s potency for change: can we rid the oceans of plastic, create a world without plastic, use graphic design to clarify and sharpen social debate?
The exhibition showcases design solutions for global problems such as pollution, conflicts, scarcity of raw materials and political tensions. Alongside existing projects, in the exhibition some of the designers developed new works or carried out experiments with the active participation of the public. Some designers created pop-up production sites in the museum, where they designed together with the public.

With 'Change the System' Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen dedicates itself to the resilience of creativity. The museum wants to inspire its visitors to look at social themes through the eyes of creative thinkers. The exhibition shows a current overview of groundbreaking design as well. From young and renowned designers that relate to the theme in an innovative and personal way and dare to work outside the boundaries of their own disciplines.

Curator Annemartine van Kesteren: “I believe that creativity is a powerful means to address the big questions of the moment. Contemporary design can inspire, initiate change or set a transfiguration of ideas in motion. Change the System gives a current overview of groundbreaking work of designers that relate to social current topics such as scarcity, conflict and unanimity. Change the System does not only exhibit highlights from contemporary design. In five Labs designers develop new work or conduct experiments where they actively involve the visitors.”

Designers in the exhibition
Annelys de Vet, Ari Versluis, Ellie Uytenbroek, Arne Hendrik, Atelier NL, Babs Haenen, Bas van Beek, Bas van Abel, Bastiaan de Nennie, Bertjan Pot, Boyan Slat, Chris Kabel, Children of the Light, Christien Meindertsma, Dave Hakkens, David Jablonowski, Dunne & Raby, Dirk Vander Kooij, Elisa van Joolen, Eric Klarenbeek, Forensic Architecture, Gavin Munro, Formafantasma, G-Star Raw, Guido Geelen, Helmut Smits, Iris van Herpen, James Bridle, Jeroen Wand, Jing He, Jolan van der Wiel, Koehorst n ’t Veld, Lex Pott, Maison Margiela, Malkit Shoshan, Manon van Hoeckel, Marjan van Aubel, Marnix de Nijs, Massoud Hassani, Melle Smets, Metahaven, Into the nightshop, Olivier van Herpt, Pauline van Dongen, Ruben Pater, Sabine Marcelis, Sander Wassink, Sarah van Sonsbeeck, Simone Post, Sruli Recht, Studio Wieki Somers, Studio WM, Thomas Thwaites, Tjeerd Veenhoven, Vetements, Viktor&Rolf, We Make Carpets, Yi-Fei Chen.

https://www.boijmans.nl
Maison Martin Margiela



Jólan van der Wiel

Wieki Somers

Disarming Design from Palestine

Disarming Design from Palestine

Atelier NL

Atelier NL

Exactitudes by Ari Versluis and Ellie Uytenbroek

Exactitudes by Ari Versluis and Ellie Uytenbroek

Elisa van Joolen

Elisa van Joolen

Maison Martin Margiela

Maison Martin Margiela

Sander Wassink

Viktor & Rolf

Viktor & Rolf

Viktor & Rolf

Eric Klarenbeek & Maartje Dros

Iris van Herpen

Manon van Hoeckel


Sruli Recht

Simone Post



POWERMASK - Wereldmuseum Rotterdam

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Portret Walter Van Beirendonck - photo Aad Hoogendoorn

POWERMASK at Wereldmuseum Rotterdam
Until 18 March 2018

POWERMASK is an exhibition curated by Walter Van Beirendonck. The exhibition is
In the exhibition Power Mask guest curator Walter van Beirendonck shares his fascination for the worlds of masks. Van Beirendonck Explores different functions of masks: the supernatural, rituals, African masks as an inspiration for modern art and masks in contemporary high fashion.

The exhibition features works from artists, designers and photographers like Viktor & Rolf, Jean Paul Gaultier, Keith Haring and Thom Browne.

photo Aad Hoogendoorn
www.wereldmuseum.nl


Coco Fronsac, C'est la fete a Rotterdam au Wereldmuseum, 2017

POWERMASK - foto Aad Hoogendoorn

Sally Wassink - Postcard (after Höch), 2007

Viktor & Rolf - Perfomance of Sculptures #18, Haute Couture SS 2016

John Galliano voor Maison Margiela - Artisanal Collection SS 2015

Charles Freger, uit de serie Wilder Mann, 2010-2011

Malanggan dansers, Bismarck Archipel, Melanesie, Oceanie, ca. 1920

Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination

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Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination

While FASHIONCLASH Festival is preparing its 10th edition curated around the theme of Fashion My Religion! another annual highlight is in the making in New York.

The Costume Institute's spring 2018 exhibition—at The Met Fifth Avenue and The Met Cloisters—will feature a dialogue between fashion and religious artworks from The Met collection to examine the relationship between creativity and the religious imagination.
 
Left: El Greco, Cardinal Fernando Niño de Guevara (1541–1609), c. 1600, oil on canvas; right: Evening Coat, Cristóbal Balenciaga for Balenciaga, Autumn/Winter 1954–55


The display of these extraordinary ecclesiastical pieces will highlight the enduring influence of religion and liturgical vestments on fashion, from Cristóbal Balenciaga to Donatella Versace, who is one of the sponsors of the show. Among the 150 or so ensembles that will be on display are pieces by Coco Chanel, who was educated by nuns, and John Galliano, whose transgressive Fall 2000 Couture collection for Christian Dior opened with a mitred, incense-swinging pope-like figure who proceeded down the runway to a voice intoning: “Understand the concept of love.”

Serving as the cornerstone of the exhibition, papal robes and accessories from the Sistine Chapel sacristy, many of which have never been seen outside The Vatican, will be on view in the Anna Wintour Costume Center. Fashions from the early 20th century to the present will be shown in The Met's Medieval and Byzantine galleries and at The Met Cloisters alongside religious artworks, to provide an interpretative context for fashion's engagement with Catholicism.

Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination” is on view May 10–October 8, 2018. A catalog with photographs by Katerina Jebb will accompany the exhibition.

 #MetHeavenlyBodies

More information: https://www.metmuseum.org


Left: Fragment of a Floor Mosaic with a Personification of Ktisis, Byzantine, 500–550, with modern restoration, marble, and glass; right: Ensemble, Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana for Dolce & Gabbana, Fall 2013–14
Left: Manuscript Leaf With Scenes From the Life of Saint Francis of Assisi, Italian, c. 1320–42, tempera and gold on parchment; right, Evening Dress, Madame Grès, 1969
Left: Bible and Book of Common Prayer, British, c. 1607, silk and metal; right: Evening Dress, Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli for Valentino, Spring 2014 haute couture

‘Heaven or Hell?’

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Jólan van der Wiel for Iris van Herpen
‘Heaven or Hell?’
28 January 2018 - 2 September 2018

Be ready for an exhibition on extraordinary shoe design at at Cube Design Museum in Kerkrade (The Netherlands)!
The exhibition is a co-production with Italy’s IMF Foundation and can be visited in the Cube design museum from 28 January to 2 September 2018.

 95% of Dutch women feel more confident when wearing a pair of beautiful shoes. However, an average of 23 pairs of shoes in the closet suggest that shoes also fulfil other desires.
Showcasing 100 pairs of remarkable footwear, the new ‘Heaven or Hell?’ exhibition at the Cube design museum highlights the needs shoes can fulfil and how shoe designers play in on this. Current, iconic specimens, shoes from the recent past, and new innovations for future shoes, ‘Heaven or Hell?’ has them all. Stilettos, ballerinas, wedges, sneakers, flip flops: are they heavenly or hell?

The NOVA shoe, designed by Zaha Hadid (1950-2016)
for United Nude, a Dutch shoe brand.

From celebrity to icon 
Over 100 pairs of special shoes have been selected for the exhibition; from shoes worn by celebrities such as Marylin Monroe, Judy Garland, Brigitte Bardot, Lady GaGa, Sara Jessica Parker in her role as Carrie Bradshaw, and Naomi Campbell, to designs by ten Dutch designers, such as the Magnetic Shoe by Jólan van der Wiel for Iris van Herpen, and iconic samples by famous international designers such as Jimmy Choo, Manolo Blahnik, Beth Levine, Vivienne Westwood, and Salvator Ferragamo.
Once on the foot, many of these shoes make it a challenge to move. Even an experienced high heel wearer like Naomi Campbell can be felled by designs with dizzyingly high heels as we saw in the famous fragment of the Vivienne Westwood show in 1993. This pair of ‘evildoers’ with a 23-cm high platform sole and heel are on display at the exhibition. Through their search for ever greater heights and unprecedented shapes, designers challenge existing shoe conventions and in turn create a new scene and new needs.

Mock-Croc Platforms by Vivienne Westwood:
the shoes that Naomi Campbell was wearing when she fell on the catwalk
during the Vivienne Westwood show in 1993.

Comfort and image
Although every extra centimetre provides a boost in self-confidence for some people, comfort is the primary criterion for the majority of Dutch women when it comes to purchasing shoes. The exhibition also includes shoes designed for ease of use, shoes that contribute to the quality of movement and foot-wellbeing. These shoes have often also become iconic over the years, such as a symbol of a particular subculture or as an example of an informal and active lifestyle. Think of Dr. Martens for instance, now must-haves for fashionistas, but for years it was the go-to shoe for the alternative punk scene. It is impossible to imagine a world without Converse sneakers, on the market since 1917 and worn by basketball players and hip business men who use them to lighten-up their business suit and create a more casual look. Shoes are pre-eminently a means of self-expression and the choice for certain footwear contributes to the image we want to create for ourselves.

Future shoes 
Shoe designers experiment with new technological and innovative materials. This allows the creation of shoes with new shapes and textures, such as the llabo-shoe by Ross Lovegrove. He used a 3D printer to create a shoe with a fine structure that drapes across the foot. British architect Zaha Hadid designed the NOVA shoe for the Dutch brand United Nude. It uses a pressure technique to make the 16-cm high heel look like it is floating.

A fully recyclable shoe by Lou Moria for his project 'last 21986'
Sustainable shoes 
The sustainable use of raw materials is a reason for many designers to experiment with new materials. ‘Heaven or Hell?’ is exhibiting a prototype of a shoe made of banana peels, a concept by Dutch designer Lotte de Boer. You can also view the world’s first pair of 3D knitted shoes, using the exact amount of necessary material. Lou Moria’s fully recyclable shoe is probably the greatest shoe when it comes to the future of our planet, but does it also look great? Entirely in style with the philosophy of the museum, Cube design museum will leave the decision between heaven or hell entirely up to the visitors.

About Cube design museum
Cube design museum, located on Museumplein in Kerkrade, is a place of innovation, national and international design, and co-creation together with the visitors. Cube focusses on design for human needs. In other words, how design applies to health, food, shelter, safety, etc. Unlike other design museums, Cube does more than just exhibit design; it is a place where knowledge is shared, and new insight comes to life. Visitors discover the story behind design, from brainstorm to prototype. Every year, the institution accommodates 30 students and designers who go through the design process from the basic need for something to the final development. Visitors are encouraged to think and work together, making co-creation the key.

More information: www.cubedesignmuseum.nl

SCHEPERS BOSMAN AW 2018

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SCHEPERS BOSMAN SHOWCASING FROM PARIS

On Sunday, January 21st, Schepers Bosman showcased their new collection from Paris.
Schepers Bosman is an Amsterdam based designer duo made up of Sanne Schepers (1989) and Anne Bosman (1988) which was formed last year in January.
The inspiration behind the new Autumn / Winter 2018 collection is a merge between pop and avant-garde. With a Pop Art mind set, the duo started on the new collection taking inspiration from their surroundings. Images from the touristic side of Amsterdam, with classical forms taken from the Amsterdam School and flower paintings from the Golden Age.
The materials used for the collection are made up of cotton corduroys and light weight denims from North England, checkered techno nylon and double stretch fleece. All prints are designed in their studio and are then applied by hand and machine. Schepers Bosman design with graphical colour, a variety of form with a minimalistic impact.

De collection was made possible thanks to the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts (AFK) and the 3PackageDeal.

Photography: Robby Hekkers
www.schepersbosman.com Instagram









Julien David Fall/Winter 2018

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                                                               www.juliendavid.com

















Comme des Garçons Homme Plus AW 2018

Federico Cina - Fall/Winter 2018

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Federico Cina Fall/Winter 2018 lookbook
Model: Simone Pedini
Photography: Gabriele Rosati & Luca Notarfrancesco
Stying: Simone Botte

www.federicocina.net












Sadak FW 2018

THE NRW DESIGN ISSUE / TNRWDI

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Katharina Beilstein at Petra Rinck Galerie
Last weekend FASHIONCLASH attended the TNRWDI DESIGN ISSUE in Düsseldorf. A brand-new concept, created by NRW Forum aiming to connect fashion design and art scene in North Rhine-Westphalia. The event took place parallel to the PLATFORM FASHION and SUPREME and GLLERY trade shows, showcasing Düsseldorf as a potential fashion city.
The visit started at the Supreme Group Trade Fair. Followed by a walk through the cities up-and-coming neighborhood where several art galleries are located. For the occasion of the TNRWDI event several galleries provided platform for contemporary emerging designers. This gallery tour was the highlight of the day, discovering talented designers and brands such as Maryvonne Wellen Jewelry, Katharina Beilstein, Second.Skin.Studio and Opaak.
Further in the evening the program continued at the impressive area. Areal Böhler, the location for this order platform in Düsseldorf, is the ideal venue to present all segments – Agencies & Premium Brands, Avantgarde, Design & Contemporary, Accessories as well as evening wear. The evening concluded with the TNRWDI CATWALK show featuring local designers Strehlow, MIAKI KOMURO, Marianna Déri, JEN MM Dsgn by Jennifer Moica, Machart Manufakture, Peter O. Mahler.

For more information: www.tnrwdi.de

Maryvonne Wellen Jewelry at Hotel Friends
Maryvonne Wellen Jewelry
Second.Skin.Studio at PFAB
Second.Skin.Studio

Katharina Beilstein

Katharina Beilstein

Katharina Beilstein

Opaak at Kunst & Denker

Opaak

Opaak



JEN MM Dsgn

SANDRINE PHILIPPE - AW18/19

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'Human Process' AW 2018/19 collection

Everything is a question the test of time, being part of a group, ones freedom, opposition, identity as an evolutionary gallery, still window, witness of a certain vision of ones life, the relationship between sense and madness, a symbol of a collective memory.

Inspired by Shakespeare’s universe, the collection swings from one texture to another, it winds in a constant chromatic range, a silent journey in a black land punctuated by touches of white there body and movement hold a main place.
 'Human Process' is diving into the abyss of pure emotion and testifies of the beauty and timelessness of human race.

www.sandrinephilippe.com
www.autrementpr.com





















Collectie Arnhem 2018

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8102 MEHNRA EITCELLOC – COLLECTIE ARNHEM 2018
Have you ever wondered what the backside of the moon looks like? Or which constellations the birthmarks are forming on your back? How we see the fun fair when the lights are off? Are you aware of what’s hiding behind your mask? Are you emerging from behind your façade?

Without a back side, there’s no front side. There’s beauty in excess, but there’s also beauty in the honesty behind all the glitter. As fashion designers, we welcome the charm of the façade. At the same time, we strive to let go and show what’s been generally hidden from us. This duality forms the core of the collection.

“Blaze with your front, command with your true side: your backside.”

We are 8102 MEHNRA EITCELLOC, a cult committed to reveal the truth: the backside. We have a shared fascination for all that’s occurring behind the façade. We fold the laundry inside out, play with crayons and collect everything that catches our eye.

8102 MEHNRA EITCELLOC visualizes a collective, a micro society which is built on creativity, love and protection. The collection is based on archetypes; figures that play an essential role within the 8102 MEHNRA EITCELLOC cult. The variety of these contemporary archetypes led to an exciting mix of various design techniques, these are subsequently applied to a uniform which strengthens the group dynamic. Think of a grandpa: an old man who rules the world and charms from his lazy chair in a pampering boilersuit. The innocent child, who is not aware of rules and can’t take his uniform seriously. Or the materialist, who is unable to see the difference between his shopping bags and clothes because of his greediness. Each archetype reveals itself within its uniform. The collection forms a fragmentary, new world and shows the power of diversity within a group.

The colours white and cream dominate the overall collection image; we find the first impression open and undefiled. White is all colours of light combined and represents a true reflection of shadow and light; everything that is designed is shown. As a counterbalance, there’s an oversaturation in the use of colour; these looks contrast starkly with the white colour palette. This exuberance is derived from the hysteria of daily façades. The use of fabric and its assimilation had everything to do with the uniform and duality between the front- and backside. The collection mainly consists of solid workman fabrics with specially developed woven jacquards as a contrast and our own watermark as highlight.

“Let go and unveil your true side.”
campaign photo by Lonneke van der Palen

Collectie Arnhem
19 third year fashion students from ArtEZ University of the Arts present the twentieth year of ‘Collectie Arnhem’. Next to designing and presenting the collection, they gain experience within all facets of the fashion industry. Collectie Arnhem 2018 will be shown on 30 January in the Art Chapel in Amsterdam.

Designers
Birgit Steinbusch | Britt Liberg | Christa Kronenburg | Django Tetteroo | Dylan Westerweel | Inez de Jong | Joline Kwakkenbos | Jule Voelklein | Kevin Pleiter | Lisa Bisschop | Liu Hong Quan | Luka Mooibroek | Manon Romeijn | Michelle Vossen | Myra van Vlimmeren | Nadine Mol | Nina Liburd | Renée Kraaijvanger | Sanne van Vloten

www.collectiearnhem.nl
www.instagram.com/collectiearnhem

show photography: Jan Willem Kaldenbach
















Don Aretino - HALAL

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HALAL, the graduation collection by Don Aretino is inspired by the duality nature of same-sex desire in Islam through out various space and time. The Qur’an and the Hadith as the fundamental sources for Islamic living conduct chronicle ambiguous stance in regard to homosexuality. Beside illustrating homosexuality in Islam, this collection attends to show another possibility of accommodating homosexuality within Islam. By taking elements of Islamic characteristics into play, the pieces in the collection represent a fresh interpretation of homosexuality in Islam.
The collection should be understood as an attempt to deconstruct homosexuality In Islam by providing theological accommodation which detaches from the social climate of seventh century Arabia and instead focuses more on the ethical principle of freedom and social justices.

Credits:
Photographer: Tomas Eyzaguirre
Creative Consultant: Tomas C. Toth
Digital Print Design Collaborator: Ziga Tomori
Make-up Artist: La Vern Marquez
Models: Joshua, Peer & Santiago

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