Saturday, 18 July 2009

Sat 18th July: Bethan Wood RCA Masters







Here is a face that is not new to the blog but what is new is her news.............Bethan Wood has just finished her Masters in Design Products at the RCA.  Until this point she has been known for her ingenious laser cut birch "Link" jewellery line.  Having dabbled with laminate surfaces for the latest collection, she has incorporated and explored this medium for her MA project  "Super Fake".  This time the vinyl has been designed and cut into marquetry inspired by fake  surfaces that make up the city's countertops, floors and walls.  Bethan wanted to challenge the typical perception of everyday  mass-produced materials and actually celebrate the chameleon character of laminates.   Why shouldn't a man-made version of the real thing not be just as beautiful with experimentation and clever placement? .........this is exactly what Bethan decided to tackle........... never one to make things easy for herself!   Her brief was to create a design that would provide visual escapism from our urban surroundings by embracing and subverting what is already there.  Not content with producing this vision in furniture, she has also applied the pattern to fabric and the first image here is of her beautiful digital print "Soft Rock".  I would absolutely love to see this used in clothing so watch this space!  
(Here is also a snap of her workspace at college to get an inside peak at her creative process)  

To find out more and see images of the rest of her products head to the crackingly entitled Wood London:
http://www.woodlondon.co.uk/

Friday, 17 July 2009

Fri 17th July: Peter Jensen Sample Sale

Whilst I was down at The Photographer's Gallery my girls headed East to check out the preview of Peter Jensen's summer sample sale and have a good old rummage through the racks of ridiculously lush garms.  Apparently there are lots of pieces from past seasons too, so it sounds the perfect opportunity to invest in archive pieces that you may have missed 1st time round..............there is up to 60% off selected items and it starts NOW 6pm.  Quick!  Leave your desk in a state and tidy it on Monday morning..............

Peter Jensen Studio
18-24 Shacklewell Lane
London  E8 2EZ
Friday 6-9, Sat 10-6, Sun 12-4

Thursday, 16 July 2009

Thurs 16th July: Simon Foxton Interview

Simon Foxton's exhibition opening at the Photographer's Gallery this evening has been a long time coming for the extensive fan base he has amassed since setting the styling world alight in the 80's (literally with the 86 shoot "Scorched").  Simon very kindly agreed to an interview for the blog so I thought I would share this opportunity by opening it up to the board for others to find out their own burning questions.  As expected the response was expertly enthusiastic.  Equipped with an onslaught of interrogation ammunition, I met up with Simon to delve into the depths of the allotment dweller dandy.
With a unanimous decision to converse over a coffee in Soho, it was a blissful time spent sitting in the sun.  Simon confessed that I had caught him at quite possibly the busiest week (4 consecutive shoots in addition to the exhibit) so I feel enormously honoured & grateful to have been granted his precious time.  It transpired to be a very special experience as Simon adeptly lept into the flow of a stream of consciousness and it turned into a fascinating glimpse into his life story.  As the pace of the patter turned into more of a conversation rather than a regular interview, I will try to write this in an equally fluid way.

So where do we begin?  From the words of Bowie and title of Penny Martin's exhibit "When You're A Boy"..........how was Simon as a child?  ..................
He went to boarding school in Edinburgh which he enjoyed "tremendously".  He loved the comradery with his cohorts and thrived in the structure of the set up.  He modestly professes to having been "popular".  An ironic statement in that he has to justify this fact with "not wishing to be big headed"........I think it is Simon's integral self-effacing nature that makes him endearing and well...........popular!  The thing he most revelled in during this era was sports and outdoor activities for which the boys had to wear shorts.  School uniform was shorts Monday to Saturday and a kilt on Sunday..........which explains his signature penchant for relentlessly sporting shorts.  This answers Mark Bailey's question "Does he wear shorts in the snow?"  Guess what?  The answer is an instant and affirmative YES.

From the weekend,  Jason Evans  www.thedailynice.com

So how did the boy in shorts become the fashion editor in shorts?  The one definitive moment of inspiration for him to start making imagery, came at college when he discovered Jean Paul Goude's shoot "Four Ethnic Groups" capturing the energy and essence of 70's NYC subculture.  As fate would unfold, Foxton would go on to work with his hero which brings us to a question which repeatedly cropped up "What has been the biggest nightmare job?".  Simon just about raises some chuckles whilst recounting this anecdote, but I can sense that only time has given grace to look back with light-hearted humour.  In 1988 he was given charge of dressing the British contingent for the Bicentennial Parade in Paris which was art-directed by Goude.  Simon excitedly rose to the challenge by sourcing a complimentary colourful 'De La Soul' derived collection of costumes.......only to be crushed by JPG's last minute instruction for all black.  However, that headache was surpassed by actual hypothermia...........the dancers were sprayed with "English Weather" rain via a fire engine pumping water onto the procession from hoses.  A little while into the proceedings the performers started to drop from exposure, collapsing under the freezing spray.  Nightmare.  Simon missed the whole parade as he fell asleep on the double decker bus from his own exhaustion!  

But lets not dwell on this and now switch to  more satisfying and soul-enhancing experiences.  Christopher Shannon wanted to know "Which image from his back-catalogue still makes him proud/tingle?".  Apparently Simon cannot pin-point one .........but once I had him firmly in a persuasive head-lock........he professed to being proud of "Strictly", his 1991 i-D shoot with Jason Evans.  He likes the way that it has stood the test of time and is still relevant today.  Too true!  
So where does the initial intuition for these concepts come from?  Steve Salter asked "Ive read that you keep a box under your bed for inspiration containing tear outs from magazines.  How do you formulate your ideas from these scraps?"  I can now confirm that this is the case.  Simon doesn't believe in stacking up smelly old back issues and prefers to make a more considered and concise reference bank.  If an image resonates with him, it winds up ripped out and glued in.  These scrapbooks are a personal vehicle to consolidate his own vision, affirming his taste and form a reminder of ideas and direction.  Curator Penny Martin got involved from trawling this primary starting point, all the way through to ordering the space at The Photographer's Gallery.  The two of them rooted through the archive boxes and Penny assertively assisted Simon to weed out the cream of the crop for this first show.  According to Simon there is a great more to be exhibited but it could not be accommodated this time.  

Penny Martin and Simon Foxton at Nick Knight's masked ball, Strawberry Hill, 2006

He also discussed apprehension of putting the sketchbooks open for inspection in the context of an exhibit.  They are an accumulation of sources, pieced together for his own personal use without intention of going on public display.  But he needn't give this another thought as I know this is the element eagerly anticipated.  Particularly Polaroids from street casting which was picked up on by Amy Gwatkin....."Has he ever walked by someone so beautiful, and not asked for their number and regretted it?"  This is a daily occurrence as Simon spots talent in many different places.  A combination of shyness and acknowledgment of not wanting to appear to be picking them up, he regularly misses the boat on propositioning potential beauties.

Another daily occurrence is "constant embarrassment".............which answers Jenny Dyson's query of a note-worthy memory of something embarrassing? ............. There is no stand-out moment in particular, as his whole life is an embarrassment with every day unfolding a new dia dilemma.  Why?  .........Simon believes he has a condition or predisposition to being devoid of face-recognition.  Yep, you heard it here first folks, Simon can't place a face.  I love this revelation.  Its hilarious.  I had a good old giggle when he told me that he actively avoids social encounters for fear of offending a friend.  It is for this reason that he skips the Menswear shows, because its a minefield of names he has worked with but wont be able to acknowledge.  (What a relief he found me at the cafe then!)  Simon seems to think that everyone knows who he is because he's big and bald (only one of which is true) but I think it may have something more to do with his legendary status?!   That, and his unique uniform of polo-shirt, Ralph Lauren shorts and Redwing Boots.

There were quite a few Sartorial questions from which I have found out the following......his favourite colour for a gingham shirt is green, also true for a DM boot if he had to choose.......the 10 hole model.  He wishes more men would wear tighter fitted trousers.  He likes to see a properly cut pair of pants and the way they compliment a "nice bum".  Similarly he hates baggy, unflattering skater jeans and is irked by an affected hat.  A jaunty trilby is a definite no-no.

Simon Foxton in his loungewear, Elgar Johnson

So having covered his clothing inclinations, lets finish up on his particular preferences on culinary queries as Richard Sloan believes this can reveal alot about a personality.  Sloan wanted exact details for how Simon would prepare his perfect bacon sandwich.  Pens at the ready.............it goes something like this............rindless unsmoked bacon - grilled, on hand cut white bread with a little bit of butter and a dash of tomato sauce - not brown.  
And to drink?  NOKI wanted to know Simon's favourite flavour of Nutriment drink?  Sorry JJ, Simon doesn't opt for this beverage of choice anymore, but when he did .....it was vanilla.
He may not be buying sickly sweet syrupy shakes these days but something I discovered is that he buys the round.  Impeccably patient and well mannered, Simon not only gave up an hour to answer absurdities  (e.g  "How do you afford to run the fleet of ubiquitous Foxton Minis that are such an iconic feature on the streets of London and how do you manage to style the fashionable young drivers so well?")....but he also picked up the bill!  The perfect gent.  The perfect afternoon.  I could have stayed chatting with this heavenly creature for the rest of the day but his next meeting was with Jonathan Kaye who was involved in the end of our interview helping Simon remember "what's the strangest item he's ever bought in a Convenience Store?"..............

We never did get to the bottom of that one and there are many, many other things I have had to edit out to keep the content cohesive................there was a terrifying tale of a plane being struck by lightening and a story of a seaside stroll when he was 18 with wet cliffs reflecting orange sun rays .............


Thanks so much to all my question contributors:


Richard Toon (Filipa K womenswear)
Diane Pernet (ASVOF)
Richard Sloan (Stylist & head honcho of HIT for ASOS.com)
Steve Salter (http://stylesalvage.blogspot.com/)
Christopher Shannon (Menswear Designer of own line)
Disney Roller Girl (disneyrollergirl.blogspot.com/)
JJ Hudson (NOKI)
Kim Howells (Stylist)
Jenny Dyson (Mrs Rubbish)
Mark Bailey (Hair Stylist)
Marcus Soder (Fashion Director BON)
Andrew Ibi (Convience Store)
Amy Gwatkin (Photographer)
Alex Cunningham (Visionnary)

SPECIAL THANKS GOES TO MY IMAGE CONTRIBUTORS WHO TOOK TIME TO RAID THIER BACK CATALOGUES AND GENEROUSLY DONATE A PORTRAIT OF SIMON. 
Jason Evans 
Elgar Johnson
Nick Knight Image (kindly located by Charlotte)
Penny Martin

A portrait of Simon for 100 portraits series that featured in i-D October 1985, Nick Knight

Special thanks also to DisneyRollergirl for lending me her Dictaphone.  I managed to loose the file so this has been written from memory.  I hope its all right!  EEEK.   

Wednesday, 15 July 2009

Weds 15th June: SHOWstudio Shop


I'm in the middle of a few deadline headaches so sorry for lack of posting!
But to keep you going here are a couple of old snaps from visits to the original SHOWstudio premises on Ironmonger Row.  Ive just been invited to the unveiling of their shop venture at the new Mayfair location so thought Id take a minute to reminisce a little about the mirrored foyer...........was I the only one or did anyone else get stuck in there?  When the door shut behind you it was a magic trick illusion to work out which panel to push to keep going...........

The shot where I have a Tiger on my head...........as you do..........is from when I filmed Ross Phillip's "The Replenishing Body" project.............thanks Kim for this snap

Tuesday, 14 July 2009

Tues 14th June: Grazia today

A hat from Heliocentric Electric
Shot by Elisha Smith Leverock
Styled by Kim Howells
Makeup Yin Lee

Sunday, 12 July 2009

Sunday 12 June: Lungs







Its Sunday.  Its chart day.  What will be No.1 in the UK album chart today?  I have a sneaking suspicion it might be Florence and the Machine.
I first saw her a couple of years ago at the opening of the Uniqlo flagship store.  The vision was a girl in a plaid shirt singing over the top of some beats that she created by occasionally banging a drum.  I didn't know who the hell she was but thought, wow she's got some guts.  The next time I saw her was in November at an acoustic concert in The Union Chapel where she had  accumulated some band members and started to wear gold leaf makeup.  Her voice spun out and reverberated within the acoustics of the chapel and the spine-tingling opening chimes of "Dog Days" made me sit up and take note.  Fast forward 8 months and I headed down to The Rivoli Ballroom for her album launch and performance.  The lyrics to her "Drumming Song" rang very true as the amplifiers were cranked up as if to fill the O2 and the crowd were physically blasted with her new set "There's a drumming noise inside my head .......I swear if you could hear it, it makes such an almighty sound......  ".  Well we did hear it!  What a massive voice and what a massive performance.  The Machine now consists of 7 musicians including long-term collaborators Rob Ackroyd (guitar), Chris Hayden (drums), Isabella summers (keyboards) and Tom Monger (harp)........which you can just about see in my snap from the stage.
Thankfully here is a much clearer photo, courtesy of one of Florence's collaborators on her style - jeweller Dominic Jones.  I got in touch with Dominic to see if he had any old photos of her as they have been friends since the beginning of her career.  This is a picture he took of her at a party in his old squat (Squallyoaks) from early 2006.  
"there is also a pic of her on by blog from a club night i put on in 2007 it was one of her first few gigs and i paid her £50. i only really did the night so my friends would have to see her! i've been her biggest fan from before she even started florence and the machine. i used to force her to make up songs and sing them to me in the toilets of nambucca. "
Here are some rings from is his latest collection which Florence wears when she performs.  I have heard on the twitter grapevine that Hannah Marshall has had a hand in the costumes for her next video so I'll do some detective work to find out more.................check back soon......

http://www.dominicjonesjewellery.com/
http://thechroniclesofacreep.blogspot.com/
http://florenceandthemachine.net
http://twitter.com/flo_tweet

Saturday, 11 July 2009

Sat 11th July: Andy MacGregor - Artist and Model



Remember this face?  The last time I featured the Blue Steel antics of my studio-mate Macgregor, was his gravity defying stance in corn fields for Hermes.  This season he has switched brands to lead the campaign for Aquascutum Ltd S/S 2010.  He is SO secretive about his sideline in modelling that we have to be super sleuths to keep tabs on this incidental career of his.  For instance on this occasion we worked together on a props job for items that had to be sent to Spring Studios.  One night we put address labels on all the pieces, and the very next morning I hear from a source within the Spring studios that he had been seen in the building.  How curious I thought, surely the courier had dealt with our delivery.  But the two were unrelated.  He had failed to mention that he would be in the same building MODELLING for this campaign.  Well, he was spotted and grassed up instantly, so that'll serve him right keeping it all on the down-low!  Nothing escapes us, especially when we intercept the phonecalls from the agencies wanting to option him.  We've decided that next time it happens, we will demand 40% commission for our time!  So watch this space.  With Vogue Italia, Vanity Fair, CDG, Paul Smith, Hermes and now Aquascutum under his belt..........who knows what luxury label trousers he'll be needing to hold up next season?  Here is the official blurb on this line from the current Esquire magazine:

Aquascutum Ltd., the British brand’s younger (and now less expensive) line looked razor sharp. Graeme Fiddler, head of menswear design, has worked wonders to make the range directional and modern, but utterly wearable too.

The brand’s unimpeachable heritage is highlighted by the fact that lots of the clothes are recreations of pieces from the archive, while other pieces bear a hint of colonial style in the form of a discreet African print. The results are spectacular, as demonstrated by Aquascutum’s non-model model, artist Andy  MacGregor, an illustrator and set designer. 

http://www.esquire.co.uk/2009/07/the-life-aquatic/

http://www.aquascutum.com/
Photos:  Emma Summerton
Styling:  Edward Enninful

Currently taking bookings for Andy MacGregor:  
Bright Young Things 0207 837 4070

Friday, 10 July 2009

Friday 10th July: Susie Bubblicious




A question I heard the other day "Why Does Everyone Want To Be A Stylist?"  Who knows, but I'm sure the incentive gifts aren't a deterrent!  Yep, the back to back week's of press days probably fill up quite a swag bag of designer goodies.  Grrr!  But there are a few shining lights who deserve treats for being genuine ambassadors and not just to plug and promote products.  Susie Bubble was one of the first writers to discover my work (props to Pernet too!) and has been a constant support.  Despite having to run Dazed Digital, her eponymous blog, freelance work etc............she also generously agreed to be my referee.  So I have thanked her in my usual secret squirrel sly way by stealthing into Dazed to drop off the gift without anyone seeing.  Quicker than the speed of heliocentric light the meteorite of fredbutlerstyle hit her desk and as if by magic it appeared on her blog with the same degree of speed.  So here are the pics from yesterday which is a great document of the delivery..............

http://stylebubble.typepad.com/

Wednesday, 8 July 2009

Thurs 9th June: Live Forever: Elizabeth Peyton


Here is a photo of  the beautiful ADi by Elizabeth Peyton and she is the reason I have come into contact with the artist as they are not only friends but ADi has also been a subject for her work.  Infact, last time I was in NYC and staying with ADi this show was on at The New Museum which is only round the corner from her flat but I ran out of time and missed it!  And here I am missing it again.  I was unable to make it down to the press preview at Whitechapel so writer/stylist Naomi Attwood went along to cover the show for me...............thankyou Naomi..............

Naomi for Fred Butler Style . . . . . . 
 The Whitechapel Gallery is a lovely wide, white space. It feels very calm and hushed and although you’re quiet and on your best behaviour, you can relax and enjoy great long private streams of consciousness while you stare at the art.  Like all successful galleries, it’s a breathing space for your mind. 
 
The exhibition in question, a few floors up consists of one room of drawings (not sketches but detailed pencil or pastel versions of Elizabeth Peyton’s famous paintings) and a large collection of her works in oils. 
 
Peyton is described in the Gallery’s literature as ‘a painter of modern life’ but it’s fair to describe her as a figurative painter, all the work depicts people she admires; whether or not she knows them, and the artist is often quoted as saying that she can only get inspired about painting someone she feels a connection to.
 
It might be one of her friends, like Ben, or Tony Luing, one of her heroes from the art world like David Hockney or Andy Warhol or other inspirational figures, like academic Susan Sontag.  
 


She has also reproduced a number of pop stars in loving brushstrokes. According to Iwona Blazwick, Director of the Gallery, Elizabeth revealed that she often paints from photos as small as the palm of her hand, torn from magazines or cut and pasted from the internet. I absolutely love this black and white one of Sid Vicious, which gives a fresh view on the iconic photograph.  

 
In some of the other jewel-bright painting we see Brit heroes such as Keith Richards or Jarvis Cocker and Liam Gallagher sharing a cig. Although all the subjects are instantly recognisable in their portraits, you view them very much through Peyton’s particular lens. Girly, lipsticky boys and tough looking girls; - including this self portrait, and the fact that none of the sittees look straight at her, their eyes unfailingly cast down or to the side, as if Peyton had managed to capture them in a natural, unposed state, caught unawares in a world of their own thoughts. 
 

Iwona Blaswick compares Peyton’s work to Rembrant and its true that her composition and perfect colour schemes betray a very accomplished painter indeed despite her fan-based subject matter. However, I think the comparisons to Nan Goldin, Corrine Day and Wolfgang Tilmans (all of whom she either knows or admires) are more apt.

 
The paintings are all so personal and each contain a mini story within their four luminous edges, that by displaying a collection of her favourite things, Peyton lays herself bare, just like the photographers who document their own worlds. 
 
One difference between Peyton, and say Corinne Day is the fact that the images are sweet, rather than seedy. After looking at a really good photo by Day you should feel slightly dirty, as if you’d been spying through someone’s bathroom keyhole or flicking through their private diary. With this artist, the overall sense is far more one of childlike innocence, and heartfelt tribute. After all, what bigger compliment can you pay someone you love other than immortalising them in oils? 
 
Live Forever is on till 20th September. 
 
Naomi Attwood

Weds 8th June: Laura Mackness - To Conclude




So here ends a day of Laura Mackness musings, magnificent knowledge and magic designs.  I love, love, love her MA collection and can't wait to see it in editorials and wonder what is coming next.......................I'm not proficient with dress terminology so here is the official downlow on the collection to leave you with........
Using a palette of baby pink, tan nude, black, grass green and canary yellow, the 26-piece collection promotes a streamline silhouette. Made entirely from double-knit wool jersey of the highest quality, the collection borrows couture finishing techniques, with each of the dress' hems finished with grosgrain ribbon. The minimalist designs are accented by witty prints, all hand-drawn by Mackness, including basic shapes, eyes and hands, trouser plackets, pocket details and knee patches. Keen to add another texture to the garments and ensuring prominence, each of the prints are flocked, as are Mackness' accompanying accessories.

laura@lauramackness.co.uk

Weds 8th June: Laura Mackness Part III The Interview cont...

6)  You also like the work of audio artist Christian Marclay who used to cut up records to make sound collages.  What would be your desert island disks and which other records would you like to mix them with (in a "Hits"  mashup style?)      .........i love Britney VS. Shakira Vs. Bee Gees..........

 I have been thinking about this a lot, I have to admit one of my most loathed questions is “What’s your favourite music” simply because I can never answer the question. I change my mind all the time, at the minute I am enjoying re living my childhood a bit and one song that always sounds good to me is ‘Kid Creole’, ‘Me No Pop I’. We used to listen to this constantly on holiday when we were about 11 or 12 years old (actually the whole Best of Kid Creole album is great). Another song that I was listening to at around the same time is ‘Chaka Demus and Pliars’, ‘Murder She Wrote’, this also still sounds amazing and is great for summer time and as such would be perfect for a desert island! Another one of my favourites is ‘Cypress Hill’, the ‘Black Sunday’ album is the best and if I had to pick one it would be ‘A to the K’, I remember my cousin guiltily playing it to me when I was far too young to be listening to it, it was like being allowed into a secret and rather mischievous world. One more that even though it is old I have only just found out about is ‘William Shatner’ doing ‘Rocketman’, this is a pure stroke of genius! And also I forgot ‘Betty Boo’, ‘Where Are You baby’. I love that song. All pretty retro I guess, but then I think a lot of the time with music it is the memories and the feelings that they bring up that mean more than the music itself.

 As for mixing them I really don’t know where I would start, I love that sort of thing but I am afraid my musical ear is not that great.  Would love to know what a bit of Kid Creole sounds like mixed with William Shatner and Cypress Hill though!

 7)  Which brings me to the subject of Bad Taste............

a)  what is your definition of Bad Taste defined by one design?  

I take issue with evening dresses and red carpet dresses at the best of times, I always think the simpler, more stream line the better. Therefore it has to be a design in this ilk that has offended me. I am afraid Zac Posen is the guilty culprit. There is a dress in the finale of his S/S 2008 collection that I just cant get me head around, it is big and puffy and I am led to believe inspired by clouds. I just fail to see how something like this has a place anymore, but that’s just my opinion, I could be wrong. 

b)  What is your definition of Bad Taste as Good Taste defined in one design?

I am sure that crown has to go to something Moschino though I am not sure I can pin point one specific design, there are too many that are just too good. Just for example the dripping chocolate cake bag (1991) is pure genius!

8)    I absolutely love the print on the knees of your leggings, as if they are a bit cheeky, peering out from underneath the hem of the skirts.  Knees are definitely over-looked on the runway!  What brought you to focus on that body part?

The knee patches came about quite naturally, a progression from elbow patches I guess. It also worked quite well as when the model is standing still it adds something to the dress makes it longer and changes the shape of the hem. I also love the way that the colour of the leggings shows when she walks and the line is broken up. You are right about the knees being neglected though; maybe I should make it my duty to give them the attention they deserve?

 9)    Your muse is a more extreme version of yourself.  The eyelash necklace is quite a statement piece!  What is the most insane accessory you like to wear and where did you get it?

 I was quite surprised at myself with that piece, it is quite crazy. I am afraid I don’t wear anything that crazy myself. Going back to your first question, I really like quite everyday things. I love, love, love watches; after my BA which featured an arm band covered in watches (all bought from a stall in Dalston for £1, they worked for about an hour) I went through a phase of wearing three or four watches at a time. I like to wear normal things I guess but in a different way, my favourite at the moment is I wear a ring (that my mum gave me which is too small for me) on a very, very long chain. It’s nothing special but I like that the chain is too long and so the ring hangs where it wouldn’t normally.

 10)  You were lucky enough to do the CSM MA when it was still at the Charing X site.  What will be your most missed/lamented memory of that building?

Its hard to put my finger on one specific memory, there has been so many (I also did my BA there). One thing that I always think is that it is kind of like a home as in I feel like I belong there, there are very few places that I think you feel like that about. In a way I have done a lot of my growing up and progressing in the walls of that building. It will always be a special place and I think that it is a great shame that it is moving.

 

 

 

 

Weds 8th June: Laura Mackness Part II The Interview

1)    You have sighted Erwin Wurm as an influence on your MA collection.  He liked the idea of adopting everyday materials and objects in his art and I can see that you have integrated lollipop sticks into one of your dresses.  What other un-expected items have you experimented with and what is your most prized pound-shop purchase?

 I love using everyday objects, hence my love for Erwin Wurm’s work. I didn’t really use any apart from the lollipop sticks in my MA collection. However it is something that I worked a lot with in my BA. One of my favourite projects was made entirely from existing knitted pieces of clothing and blankets, and another was made using loads of jumpers.



As for my most prized £1 shop purchase? There have been many but my most memorable visit was back home in Leicester. There is a brilliant bargain shop called Home Bargains that sells the most bizarre assortment of stuff! My boyfriend and I often go in to see what random things we can get our hands on, on one occasion we decided we would set ourselves a challenge to buy each other presents for the modest sum of £2, I think mine was a policewoman doll and a rather rude balloon kit and James’ was a tin of beef in gravy and a Robbie Williams video. Life doesn’t get any better than that! 


 

2)  He is also known for saying that humorous work falls prey to not being taken seriously. 

a)  Were you ever concerned with that in this fickle fashion world? 

 I was and have always been concerned about this, but then it seems to be what I am good at and there is something to be said for being able to make people smile. I have also always been reassured that my work should be taken seriously. I don’t particularly think the fashion world should take itself to seriously anyway.

 b)    What is your most favourite stand out hilarious design from history? 

I guess I have to say the knitted extravaganza that Bruno wore on the red carpet recently, if only because all my friends insisted that it must be one of my creations (sadly it is not). I don’t know apart from that, everyone takes it far too seriously now so we very rarely get treated to something funny or even whimsical. Bjork’s swan dress which she wore to the Oscars in 2001 is of course an absolute classic.

 

2)    There is a surreal element with the trompe l'oeil detailing; I love the drawn-on fly and zip!  If you could invent a modern equivalent to the lobster phone, what would be your dream bizarre house-hold item?

I think that it would definetly have to be something to do with shoes. I love the way that shoes look, the way that they always come in a pair, how odd it is for one to be on its own and how much one shoe can vary from another. Two of my favourite art pieces have shoes in them: Meret Oppenheim’s ‘My Nurse’ (1936) as it is so strange and alien to find shoes in the place of your food, and how right yet wrong they look there and Fischli and Weiss’ shoe sculpture from the series, ‘Equilibres/Quiet Afternoon’ (1984-87). I guess in a very strange and ideal world I would have shoe everything, shoe phone (I know this already exists, but I would love one), shoe lamp, shoe kettle, shoe shower, shoe taps, shoe plug, shoe toaster, table and chairs made from shoes (these would be balanced very much in the style of Fischli and Weiss)


 

 3)    You have acknowledged Elsa Schiaperlli in your inspirations.  She invented shocking pink and I have read in a review of your work that you used 'bon bon pink' which I thought was a perceptive descriptive hue.  If you could have a colour named after you, what colour what would it be and what name would it have?

Pink really is my favourite colour, I never thought it would be but it really is. I never wear it myself and I don’t think I even own anything pink, but I just love it, I would love to have pink hair, one of my favourite images and one which I always have on my wall is the Juergen Teller photograph of Kate Moss with pink hair. I especially like the shade that I used in my collection. It is quite hard to name pink as people already have there own very definite idea about it and it is already very pigeonholed as being girly and pretty. I like a much dirtier grubbier pink than this, like the girly pretty girl has been playing out in the mud in her pink dress and has come back with it looking much improved. So I thought, corrupt pink (a bit too punk), impure pink (no), pigpen pink (not sure anyone would want to wear this) in the end I decided that Odd pink was more descriptive of me and everything that I like, though I am not one hundred percent sold on this, or maybe just Mack Pink. I think you may have encouraged me to muse about this for the rest of my life.

 5)  Jean Paul Goude had also had an imprint on your style which is something I really connect with.  I went to his lecture at the V&A and he said that he would like to get his hands on Janet Jackson.  If you could re-invent a celebrity with styling, who would you like to work the Mackness Magic on?

 My favourite celebrity at the moment is Katie Price aka Jordan, I find her fascinating. I guess I would love to re-style her but then I kind of like what she wears, it’s very her! I like Love Foxx too, I saw her performing once with eyes painted on her eye lids so that when she closes her eyes they look open, It was at the time I was researching for my collection and had just found an image of exactly this, so we are obviously on the same page!

I also saw Jennifer Saunders once, my childhood hero from Absolutely Fabulous though she was lovely and looked great I was slightly disappointed that she wasn’t actually Eddie! How fantastic would it be to get your hands on that wardrobe, all that Moschino and Lacroix!

Weds 8th June: Laura Mackness





I am very, very excited about this post.
As readers may know, Im not shy of a superlative or singing shining praise.  But Ive been sitting on this one for quite a while.  Infact a very, very long time.  Febuary to be precise, when Laura graduated from the CSM MA with distinction.    I went to the static show to see Michael's collection but couldn't help looking over my shoulder, hypnotised by the Siren blinking eyelashes flirting with me, enticing me over.  Not Laura's eyelashes!....... but the ones she created as a giant necklace which was just one of the stand-out pieces from her stand-out collection.  
I wanted to get a good grasp of what was going on with this scrumpdiddlydumpcious collection, so I went about my usual research.  As it turned out I didn't know any of her inspirations and got lost down an Erwin Wurm hole and couldn't get back out.  But fortunately I finally managed to compile some questions to equate worth to Laura's discerning designs.   She has put together some fantastic answers, so before I upload it all..........here are some scans from her sketchbooks to keep you going...............

Tuesday, 7 July 2009

Tue 7th June: Kyle Bean Part IIg






So here is Kyle's camera I was talking about.............and numerous other electrical appliances.  He used these within his display at the exhibition to show his films with actual screens installed inside the cardboard casing.  The other items had been turned into light boxes (as you can see in my snap).  There was not a wisp of estranged glue on any of these magnificent maquettes.  I take my hat off to Kyle's model-making and the answer to his deftness is that he started when he was a kid!  A-ha!  Musicians buy their offspring instruments, skaters buy their kids boards, break-dancers get their kids body-popping before running...........think I'm going to invest in a mini glue-gun and cutting mat if I procreate!
To see more (and there is a hell of a lot more!) check out Kyle's website...
www.kylebean.co.uk/