... of the week is so close to Friday that in itself it holds a need for celebration. It has always been referred by me as "daybeforefridayday" and with the spring like weather I'm having nostalgic moments dreaming of English summer grass. Mowed and dry and having grass fights and building birds nest at a tender age on the school field.
This theme is apparent in the plimsolls that adorn my feet on my walk to work - £2 bargains from school uniform shops have been my bread and butter of comfortable walking shoes for years.
And though my childhood happiness was more dig up the garden and rummage through boot sales with ma, a Barbie is still a Barbie unless it's a Cindy or Eliza Cummings in sky blue satin and a Geri Halliwell red styled wig like featured above from Vogue Italia.
Inspired.
Primary school P.E. (hopping over benches and horses) was a real joy and those JW Anderson shoes found on the SHOWstudio blog remind me of primary days spent frolicking around doing a rolly polly with bright coloured headbands dotted around the playground.
Fashion wise sat at my desk donning chinos, a tweed blazer and primary yellow vest I'm almost certain that this representation of English childhood and schooling is something I will be investigating more regularly.
It is indeed seen in almost every styled look in circulation. Case in point the socks and shoes combo every schoolgirl in England will have definitely taken part in as part of the rigour and joy (depending which side your one) of school uniform. Never mind the Alexa bombardment over the last few years as a sign of the English school tradition invasion. So although fashion has gone grown up with sleek sophistication and fetish elements seen all over AW11 (think Mr. Jacobs) for those yearning an anecdote maybe childhood nostalgia is just the ticket.
And so these dreaming moments of mine are just fine.
sources and details: Elizabeth Johnson, chunk of copper, Fashiongonerouge, Balenciaga boots on Rumi Neely, Jason Fulford, Kirill Kuletski, Vivienne Westwood ad campaign and Tobias Kruse
Forming a mental lookbook for me are all of these stunners. Get in my son. Just like that 'sentence' the theme of inappropriate awkwardness is something I am referring to more and more in terms of personal styling and fashion inspiration.
Something that doesn't belong together but yet has been paired to create an interesting and odd juxtaposition has seeped into my conciousness with unashamed abandonment.
Those of you that read some earlier posts from last year will know how much I love BOOOOOOOM for photographic inspiration and for the rest ... hit and miss Google searching.
Dribbling over the styling of Giselle for the Balenciaga SS11 campaign. That sense of awkardness also comes through in the Vogue Paris cover from 1968 and vintage Biba advertising.
All in all things don't seem quite right with the subjects in these images which perfectly sums up me and my aesthetic for AW11 and thereon.
Yesterday saw the Birds Eye View Film Festival 2011 sponsored by Vogue.com present Fashion loves Film: Art and Commerce. The event hosted for the first time at BFI Southbank provided a distinctly exclusive female panel of artists and filmmakers with a platform for us to view their works and indulge in a panel discussion post viewings.
Arriving early (lesson learned from previous fashion late debacles) I bumped into the gorgeous Richard Nicoll glowing with the post LFW success of his AW11 show – of which the fluidity of the fabrics and the draping of plush neutrals in clean and sensual lines brought many a smile.
The panel consisted of Jaime Perlman Art Director for British Vogue, Francesa Gavin writer, curator and Visual Arts Editor of Dazed and Confused and artistic filmmakers from the presentation - Ruth Hogben, Julie Verhoeven and Katerina Jebb.
There was a distinct split in the style of the films with the first half exploring a more questioning view of feminism, consumerism and personal identity via the medium of art presented in film format. The second half showed a more ‘conventional’ view of video in fashion with what seemed to be more centred on the collections of designers including Henry Holland, Vanessa Bruno and Holly Fulton – prompting the finale question from a member of the audience “what is the difference between a fashion film and an advertisement?” - One which although the panel did not have time to discuss resonated with me, in the fact that in order for fashion and film to produce the poignancy, acclamation and respect of art and independent films it must try to delve further than advertising a collection, although business wise somewhere in the spectrum of fashion advertising this will be duly noted down as an aim.
Nether the less, the films shown and discussed raised visual markers to our relationships with beauty, sexuality and consumerism as human beings and women. An aptly suitable topic in the week in which women are celebrated, discussed and congratulated through International Women’s Day.
Personal stand out films included Forgetful Green by Linder Sterling, 2010 which looked at views on glamour and distorted visions of fame. Simulacrum and Hyperbole by Katerina Jebb, 2010 (watch here) lightened the mood of the auditorium yet pressed questions on our consumer driven state of being and through satirical ‘adverts’ featuring Tilda Swinton, Kylie Minogue and a host of equally enchanting women disseminated our fears of inadequacy fuelled by clever marketing and exploitation of these make believe inadequacies. All of which powerful and thought provoking pieces of art.
Fashion statements were heralded in the form of Ruth’s captivating piece for Gareth Pugh
which stripped away sexuality and presented a platform for the garments themselves to frame and produce strong silhouettes that equalled the designs themselves having as central a role (if not more so). First seen by me on the gawjus blog of a one Lulu Kennedy. Speaking about fashion and film Ruth could not deny her love for fashion and clothing, pointing out that for her “fashion publications offer a static fantasy that film can help to bring alive”.
It would seem that although fashion and film have always shared a rich heritage and intertwined relationship, there new journey together highlighted last night, is one that is no longer confined to designers creating the garments for a film but presenting an artistic collaboration where the inner dreams and nightmares of the designer and collection are presented on a moving platform where the viewer can indulge in something that has all the artistic integrity it seeks to find.