Game Changers - MOMU Antwerp
Antwerp Day 2 July 3rd 2016
I am often in the head space that nothing can go wrong when you are in a museum....
Some may say that I just have my head in the clouds.
But when you are in a really good exhibition, time does seem to stop. One reacts emotively to what is laid out before you. It doesn't always happen and sometimes it may happen with just one object. (The same thing happens when walking in nature or being visually aware in a day to day way too). At Game Changers, MOMU, this was the case for me.
None more so than when in front of the pale, salmon silk, Balenciaga dress in the Technical Mastery case.
The account of my Fellowship travels in millinery, museums, makers, manufacturers, moda and more
Showing posts with label Balenciaga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Balenciaga. Show all posts
Saturday, 30 July 2016
MOMU Sunday (continued)
MOMU Sunday (continued)
I was slightly Technically Challenged!
I was slightly Technically Challenged!
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one of the films from the opening section |
Following this breathtaking opening was the chance to see
a collection of Balenciaga dresses that one rarely has the opportunity to. The
first case was a collection of iconic black dresses. Two of these were
revolving to enable the detail front and back to be seen which worked so well.
There were definitely two dresses here that I would love to try to recreate.
Especially the piece with layered shoulders which had a similar silhouette to my
most favourite dress.
Something that I learned after my visit here and the conversation
with the Collections Manager was the importance of perfect mannequin-age the
idea that you just see the clothes, this is the holy grail of fashion
exhibitions. At MOMU one has found this.
The opening of the exhibition begins with the phrase ‘Tiger’s
Leap’ taken from the writing of Walter Benjamin, fashion’s reflecting on the
past to leap into the future. Balenciaga did this in the 1940’s creating a
whole new silhouette for women. Far removed from the New Look from Dior,
offering new readings of past shapes and continuing to experiment and push
boundaries.
The kimono always an iconic
garment, recreated in many forms by many designers. Can it be challenged?
Within the exhibition we see new ways of thinking and how the designers brought
together for this exhibition have challenged the form.
I learned from the space
between body and fabric from the traditional kimono not the style but the space
Issy Miyake
The language brings to mind
the context behind clothes and how we studying fashion continue to work with a
different narrative.
Labels:
Antwerp,
Balenciaga,
Belgique,
Belgium,
comme des garcons,
designer,
exhibitionOp Art,
fashion,
MOMU,
MOMUAntwerp,
museum,
Rei Kawakebu,
Sharon Bainbridge,
Uniqlo,
WCMT,
Winston Churchill Fellowship
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