Showing posts with label Fashion and Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fashion and Music. Show all posts

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

David Bowie Retrospective


David Bowie by David Bailey, 1972

There is such anticipation for this exhibition of Bowie's costumes and private archive, the V&A is already selling tickets. The show opens March 23, 2013, more information here

Monday, October 17, 2011

CCC



CCC, the art of music, mixed and designed well, latest by Harry Bennett

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Top 30: Bowie Vs. Jones



Bowie with Twiggy for Pin-Ups, 1973

David Bowie and Grace Jones represent an intersection of music, fashion and androgyny. Each of them, in stark contrast, have an intensity that captivates and a creative personality that is larger than life. They are living art.


Above Bowie promotion for Fashion from Scary Monsters 1980 and right Jones' Nightclubbing from 1981.



Bowie as Ziggy Stardust, Givenchy 2010

Grace Jones by Jean-Paul Goude for V Magazine


Jones by Andrea Klarin

Monday, March 29, 2010

Music Vs. Music

Judging by the cover design!


Feist 2007 Vs. Marling 2010


Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Fashion & Music


Chanel by Karl Lagerfeld in 1991

Music is an art form with a stage presence that has connected it to costumes and fashion. Rock, punk, glam and country western are all recognized styles. Hip Hop is a subculture of both music and style. In Great Aspirations: Hip Hop and Fashion Dress for Excess and Success,” Emil Wilbeki begins by explaining that Hip Hop was first resistant to fashion and then slowly became consumed with status. Rap stars began to align with American Dream of excess. The clothing style varied from track suits to prep.

Run DMC, late 80's

Isaac Mizrahi saw his elevator operator with a gold chain and repeated the look in the late 1980’s, supporting “homeboy chic.” Karl Lagerfeld used padlocks, similar to Treach by Naughty Nature. Russell Simmons, Sean Combs and Master P started clothing lines. Simmons coined the phrase “ghetto fabulous” mixing the sexuality of the styles of Versace, Fendi and Dolce & Gabbana to create Phat Farm. Combs partnered with Zac Posen. Norma Kamali below styled Chaka Khan’s “I Feel for You,” video with stretch jersey.

Kamali

Marc Jacobs for Perry Ellis 1992 in Vogue

Malcolm Barnard, in his essay, “Fashion, Art, Performance, Masquerade,” explains that fashion is associated with concepts of identity, beauty, performance, spectacle and masquerade: “Identity may now be thought of as an ongoing performance which is immediately undermined as the appearance of authentic identity and with all the theatrical and spectacular connotations that accompany the idea.” He describes David Bowie as “Ziggy Stardust” as “mixing fashion, art, performance and spectacle.”



New Zealand musicians Flight of the Conchords included a segment of Bowie in his "outer space years," above. The Conchords work with a French costume designer Rahel Afiley and have created a video called "Fashion is Danger." Images below from V Magazine 50 "Greatest Hits."
Fashion, Fa-fa-fa-faashion
St-st-style
Lo-lo-lo-lo-look look look
I'm the edge, I'm the chic, I'm the taste,
I'm larger than life with just a hint of lace
I'm the vanguard, I'm the air, I'm the vogue
I'm the shi-shi, ooh oui-i, I'm the man a la mode

P-p-p-p-p-president Reagan
Thatcher Th-Th-Thatcher
Jazzercise!
L-L-L-Lipgloss,
Ooh-ooh-ooh!


Posing, Posing at the bar
Posing, Posing sitting down
Posing, Posing in the distance
Posing, Posing with my arm
Posing, Posing with my leg
Posing, Posing like a swan
Posing, Posing for a portrait
Posing a threat

You think you know fashion
Well, fashion's a stranger
You think fashion's your friend
My friend, fashion is danger

Moscow, Berlin, Paris, London
Tokyo, Wellington, Rome, Geneva
New York City
New-New-New-New York City


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