Picture 2

Contrary to popular belief, clothes are not practical and dress is not necessary. Thomas Carlyle’s Professor Teufelsdröckh told us in the mid-nineteenth century that ‘The first purpose of clothes was not warmth or decency, but ornament… among wild people we find tattooing and painting even prior to clothes’, and he found resonance with a certain supercilious feline in Meji Japan, Natsume Sōseki’s nameless narrator in his novel I Am a Cat who mused that ‘human history is not the history of flesh and bone and blood, but a mere chronicle of costumes’.

Opening next month at The Barbican in London is Future Beauty, a major survey of avant-garde Japanese fashion from the last 30 years, curated by fashion historian and Kyoto Costume Institute Director, Akiko Fukai. Organised around four themes – blackness and shadows; flatness and form; tradition and innovation; street style and popular culture – the exhibition will explore the unique sensibilities of Japanese fashion since the early 1980s when Issey Miyake, Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garçons and Yohji Yamamoto proposed a radically new fashion aesthetic.

Emerging from Japan’s post-war economic and industrial boom, Miyake, Kawakubo and Yamamoto emphasized playfulness, textile innovation, sculptural volume and freedom of movement ­– defying the bright, body-conscious glamour of the lycra-loving early eighties and often referring back to Japan’s rich visual heritage. Their works will be presented alongside their successors including Comme des Garçons protégé Junya Watanabe, as well as Jun Takahashi of UnderCover, Final Home by Kosuke Tsmura, Tao Kurihara, Matohu, Akira Naka and mintdesigns…

1. Mikio Sakabe

2. Issey Miyake. © Anthea Simms

3. Isabella Blow in Isabella Blow in Hiroaki OhyaIsabella Blow in OhYa. Photograph Mika Ninagawa

4. Rei Kawakubo, Comme des Garçons. © Anthea Simms

6. Final Home  Kosuke Tsmura

10. Mintdesigns

15. Rei Kawakubo,Comme des Garçons

Comme des Garcons Lumps and Bumps

Images from top left:
1. Rei Kawakubo/ Comme des Garçons. Autumn/ Winter 1995. Collection of the Kyoto Costume Institute. Photograph by Takashi Hatakeyama.
2. Rei Kawakubo/Comme des Garçons. Autumn/Winter 1983-84. Collection of the Kyoto Costume Institute.
3. Mikio Sakabe. Autumn/Winter 2008-09. ©MIKIO SAKABE Co.,Ltd.
4. Issey Miyake. Spring/Summer 1995. © Anthea Simms.
5. Isabella Blow in Hiroaki Ohya. Spring/Summer 2000. Photograph by Mika Ninagawa. © Mika Ninagawa, Courtesy of Vogue Nippon and the Executors of the Isabella Blow Estate.
6. Rei Kawakubo / Comme des Garçons. Spring/Summer 2007. © Anthea Simms.
7. Final Home / Kosuke Tsmura 1994. ‘Final Home’ Coat. Collection of the Kyoto Costume Institute. Photograph by Takashi Hatakeyama.
8. mintdesigns. Autumn/Winter 2008-09. Courtesy of mintdesigns, photograph by Yoshitsugu Enomoto, hair and makeup by Tetsuya Kamo.
9. Rei Kawakubo / Comme des Garçons. Spring/Summer 2008. Courtesy of Comme des Garçons, Ltd.
10. Rei Kawakubo/ Comme des Garçons Spring/ Summer 1997. Collection of the Kyoto Costume Institute, Photograph by Takashi Hatakeyama.
Posted by a 11:42 AM, September 15th, 2010 1 comment


1 Comment

  1. Can’t wait for this. Thanks for the tantalizing preview.

    Comment by Mark Mouler — September 24, 2010 @ 5:56 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.
Tags