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IO TAKEMURA SLOW FASHION

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la
la
United Kingdom

I spent some time considering this piece and I feel the basic premise is incorrect.
Fashion is all about wanting clothing this season that you didn't want last season.
It is not about a favorite pair of comfy old jeans, thats more about leisure or feelings of unthreatening nostalgia. Fashion, when it is exciting ,is about cravings for clothes that all of a sudden feel like the most desireable clothes ever.It is very crucially time based. I know that all this isn't particularily friendly for the environment,but the fact that Fashion is often politically incorrect is part of what makes it exciting. Just like Rock music,you want it to feel dangerous ,rebellious,subversive.Can you imagine anythig worse that poltically correct Rock? Same goes for Fashion.

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In reply to la:

Yes and this is exactly why fashion can never be a reliable medium through which to communicate serious political thought. I think this project underlies a very real confusion or an inability to discriminate between surface and ideology. If history has taught us anything, it is that fashion and politics should be kept as far apart as possible. When fashion is conflated with any political ideology, what you are inevitably left with is fascism.

Fashion is fascist because it has to be. Anyone who thinks fashion is a platform for sending out messages for world peace is dangerously deluded.

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In reply to bamia:

hmmmm,intresting.So what you appear to be saying to La is that even if fashion designers like Katherine Hamnett or Westwood or Noki for example have very strong political views they should not express them through their work.
If JuergenTeller wants to talk about consumerism or the politics of celebrity through his work just like Cindy Sherman would in hers,he shouldn't even attempt it? are we not going to end with just pretty pictures of pretty girls in pretty dresses,and I am sure you would agree that would be boring as hell.

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la
la
United Kingdom

Sorry,bamia,I am saying this film isn't about Fashion,not that the idea behind the project is wrong.
I think the idea of fashion and politics can no more usefully be separated than fashion and sex. You seldom get one without the other!

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to go on from my post earlier,alot of fashion photographers have strong political views be it about sexuality eg Newton or celebrity eg Avedon and it is because we see these feelings and views in their work that we are interested to see what they say. This project seems to be about encouraging people to speak their mind through their work. Not just to produce vacant imagery to wallpaper our world with.

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First of all 'strong views’ have nothing to do with 'serious political thought'. Go and speak to a group of neo-nazis, I’m sure you’ll find they'll have some 'strong views', but would you really class them as serious thinkers? I think not.

Fashion is allowed a creative space in which it can enjoy a free quotation of visual references. This is what makes fashion stimulating - it can use ‘controversial’ imagery to create an exciting, sensational effect that feels contemporary and arresting – think of the way you felt when you first saw the Bennetton campaign with the gay guy dying of AIDS or the ‘shocking’ heroin chic look of the CK ads. Fashion has license to use these elements in order to create exciting sensations to sell clothes. Now, I’m totally okay with this; I think it’s harmless provocation on a fun, superficial level. But that, I’m afraid, is all there is to it.

I am not saying that fashion creatives should be forbidden from using ‘political’ imagery. On the contrary, I think that fashion creatives can use whichever imagery they want in order to get the reaction they are looking for. However, to claim that fashion itself is ‘political’ on the grounds that it appropriates a provocative slogan or a picture of a starving child is deeply foolish. Fashion will never be political because fashion does not have any points to make. Fashion is ideologically castrated, it is decorative, the eunuch of the visual arts. Fashion is also not Art. When fashion has been appropriated by political thinkers in the past it becomes instrumental in the creation of a fascistoid model - an order based on visual idealism. The only points that fashion makes are ones governed by fantasy, idealism and aesthetics. Period.

If fashion creatives have political points to make and they are so intent on being taken seriously then they must make these points outside the arena of fashion. Fashion is in a constant state of flux, just as LA mentioned, governed by the ‘new’, by consumer ‘craving’ by ‘danger’. This does not provide a sound basis on which to propose a political argument. For this reason pure image makers will never be given the kind of serious ‘political’ attention that they so badly crave. I think that Vivienne Westwood, Juergen Teller and Katherine Hamnett may have a few interesting ideas but in order for their voices to be given more credibility, they need to relinquish their roles as image and brand makers. To her credit, Westwood said in a Newsnight interview that her convictions are a separate issue from her label and that her Manifesto is not acynical ploy to boost profitability. She even said, ‘don’t buy my clothes, just listen to what I have to say' (rather ironically Westwood was also talking out against fashion and magazine imagery which she feels has polluted intellectual thinking - she says that people should read books instead!). I think it has taken her a while to grasp that her ideas must be developed exclusively from her role as fashion brand but I am glad that she has embraced this. On the other hand, I think a lot of people can’t take Vivienne Westwood seriously because she is and, in most people’s minds, always will be a fashion designer. Image makers need to realize that they can’t have it both ways. By all means, they should continue putting their ideas out there but they need to accept that these images will never penetrate into the higher political conscience.

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la
la
United Kingdom
In reply to bamia:

Bamia,can i pick up on a few points you make?
Firstly i don't think anyone was suggesing appropriating a picture of a starving chld to demonstrate that fashion has the ability to articulate political thought.
You say that fashon is ideologically castrated and the only reaon you appear to give is that it is decorative.Surely this can be levelled at painting or indeed film both of which I guess you think can express political thought.
You also state that when fashion is appropriated by poliical thinkers it creates a fascistoid model,do think this was true in the case of Punk,one of the most visually original and initially one of the most individualistic of youth cults.
You make great play in your last paragraph of the role of commerce in negating artistic expression,do we all really believe that .Please lets not pretend that with out the enourmous profits made in the art world that it would be so exciting as it is right now.
To borrow an often quoted saying from the world of Fashion,I'm not sure Gursky,Koons or Hirst get out of bed for much less than 10,000 pounds.

In my opinion people who have something they feel is important to say express it in the medium that they are most skilled in. For some that is painting ,some,singing,and some fashion. ( clearly it is not writting in my case!) and I dont feel it is the medium that should validate the authenticity and worth of the message.

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In reply to la:

LA: Bamia,can i pick up on a few points you make?
Firstly i don't think anyone was suggesing appropriating a picture of a starving chld to demonstrate that fashion has the ability to articulate political thought.

BAMIA: Fashion imagery in the past has appeared to have done exactly that though.

LA: You say that fashon is ideologically castrated and the only reaon you appear to give is that it is decorative.Surely this can be levelled at painting or indeed film both of which I guess you think can express political thought.

BAMIA: I also said that fashion is not an appropriate medium to build a serious political argument. As you said yourself, fashion is driven by impulse, it is fickle or ‘crucially time based’, and it does not have the good of society as its core motivation because, as you say, ‘it isn’t particularly friendly for the environment’ and it uses ‘political incorrectness’ to generate excitement and ‘craving’. To me this clearly illustrates why fashion is not a reliable means of making a serious point. Don’t confuse political messages with images of political ‘controversy’ or ‘sensation’. They are not the same thing. You’ve already answered your own question here.

And no, I do not believe good painting and film to be merely ‘decorative’. Good fashion imagery in my opinion is alluring because it succeeds in weaving an exquisite deception. It can trick its onlooker into believing there is some kind of profundity behind it. That profundity feeds the craving for the goods. Fashion has never made a profound statement beyond telling us what we want; it is only about desire - this is why it can never be political in the context you are trying to frame it. Good art, film and literature can unquestionably make far-reaching political points that demand intellectual engagement. Fashion has never managed this with me. That is not to say, however, that I don’t immensely enjoy looking at it.

LA: You also state that when fashion is appropriated by poliical thinkers it creates a fascistoid model,do think this was true in the case of Punk,one of the most visually original and initially one of the most individualistic of youth cults.

BAMIA: Absolutely. When I use the term ‘fascistoid’ I am talking about extreme movements that similarly operate on extreme, unsustainable ideas. Punk was exactly such an extreme movement, created by discontent and fuelled by sentimentality. It used antisocial behaviour, violence and provocative slogans; it was exclusive and discriminatory and had a strong visual element at its root that overshadowed any real and practical principles about how we should live our lives. Punk was gestural, it was a trend; in many ways it was not truly political. If it had become a political movement and in turn, a real punk society had been formed from that movement, a state of perpetual degradation would have resulted. Punk didn’t survive because it was more about style and impulsive reactive gesticulation than it was about a concrete ideological basis. I’m sure Vivienne Westwood will back me up on this.

The Third Reich, although totally different in its ideas, was also extreme, sentimental, discriminatory and used strong visual styles and motifs to draw its collective tighter together into a state of magnificent unity. Ultimately, too, it was unsustainable. Rather than the grotty abandon of punk, fascism was about symmetry, order, magnitude, national provenance. Interestingly, in stylistic terms, it was not totally dissimilar from a lot of Soviet or Chinese communist motifs. Compare the magnitude of Tiananmen square or Berlin’s former Stalinallee for instance with the scale of something like Schinkel’s original plans for the Reichstag.

Historically, fashion and political extremism have made bedfellows – they share an intimate dialogue between idealism and aesthetic realisation. Fashion as it exists today is a eunuch because its deployment is concerned with image alone and the desire and sensation created by image. It doesn't really prescribe a way of thinking aside from consumer impulse. Fashion exists in its own protofascist playpen and it is allowed free reign within these confines. I concede that a lot of creatives want to shape the way people think, but really, beyond changing what people want to spend their money on, I don’t believe these ambitions will ever be fulfilled.

We do not live in danger of fashion crossing over into politics because fashion has sealed its pact with the buck. Fashion remains an adjunct to capitalism, not ideology. Pretences at crossing into political influence are absurd and belie creative megalomania. In turn this can be fun to observe and makes for interesting imagery.

The two qualities of ‘visual originality’ and ‘individuality’, you ascribe to punk have nothing to do with politics. I think the term ‘politics’ is being used too loosely here. ‘Image’ and content cannot be exchanged so liberally. I feel these ways of thinking about politics are largely symptomatic of the way it is mediated today, through a lot of image and spin that leaves one unable to differentiate between brass tacks and surface hype.

LA: You make great play in your last paragraph of the role of commerce in negating artistic expression,do we all really believe that .Please lets not pretend that with out the enourmous profits made in the art world that it would be so exciting as it is right now.
To borrow an often quoted saying from the world of Fashion,I'm not sure Gursky,Koons or Hirst get out of bed for much less than 10,000 pounds.

BAMIA: I think the matter of whether the art world is ‘exciting’ today is a matter of opinion. I also think that ‘art’ whether good, bad, inauthentic, whatever, is always a reflection of its times. Incidentally, most of the things at big art fairs like Frieze I feel are of little interest; faddy, showy and devoid of much real substance. I go to have a look because I think it is important to see what is going on but I would be lying if I claimed the actual art itself interested me. What I find really interesting is to observe the art world from the outside and the way that people organize themselves hierarchically using status symbols and the new vernaculars of consumption that arise out of this. It is totally ripe for satire. I believe at the moment the art world is only really exciting for one kind of person: investors.

LA: In my opinion, people who have something they feel is important to say express it in the medium that they are most skilled in. For some that is painting ,some,singing,and some fashion. ( clearly it is not writting in my case!) and I dont feel it is the medium that should validate the authenticity and worth of the message.

BAMIA: That’s fine. I think that fashion creatives make a good job of making arresting imagery. If they think they’re being ‘political’ and this makes them feel more relevant or validated in their role as creatives, then that’s fine. In my opinion, fashion does not need this kind of validation.

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Galileo's Universe
Galileo's Universe
Greenland
In reply to bamia:

... fascinating and utterly helpful the wording of the ideas to back up the arguments on the subject of ..... Fashion and 'Politics' .... it made my day ! :):)

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In reply to bamia:

This is all very interesting, but also incredibly confusing. Are you talking about fashion really or about the photography/filmed imagery etc that accompanies said being a/political?

"I think the matter of whether the art world is ‘exciting’ today is a matter of opinion. I also think that ‘art’ whether good, bad, inauthentic, whatever, is always a reflection of its times."

And it's the same with fashion, no?

Simplistically speaking, that one strand of fashion in history can be perceived as fascistic doesn't mean that all fashion is. But even as one strand of fashion is perceived as fascistic, as such it is intrinsically political. Therefore, other kinds of fashion can also be political, more or less, in other ways - if only in the sense that it's a reflection of its time.

How fashion is represented is something(s) else again?

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