| Approaching
                fashion from a personal vantage point, I am confronted with the
                topic on a daily basis. My young son frequently asks me for money
                to buy clothes by Armani, Calvin Klein or some other popular
                designer. I am also witness to his daily fashion-inspired ritual
                of identity building, which means getting out of bed in the morning
                as just another young boy and transforming himself into a "super-styled"
                fashion freak in knee-high jeans by the time he's ready to go
                out in the evening. It doesn't even take the "Fuck is Cool" on
                his t-shirt to make it clear to me what role fashion plays as
                a medium for communicating youthful rebellion! A Way Beyond Fashion analyzes the shifting boundaries between
                art and fashion design. The selected 11 artists and designers
                blur the lines between the two disciplines when exploring phenomena
                related to the global fashion industry in their performances,
                public art actions, films, animations and installations- all
                as a means of juxtaposing the prevailing discourse on identity
                and media-related consumption patterns with entirely new concepts
                and forms of articulation. Indeed, an examination of fashion
                codes, languages and strategies serves as the source material
                for the presented projects that, charged with aesthetic, economic
                and technological implications, are contributing to the design
				of "real life worlds." Naturally, my own passion for fashion resonates with a project
                like A Way Beyond Fashion. I like to wear Helmut Lang — a vintage
                suit that I couldn't have afforded if it had been new — and a
                Viktor & Rolf tie, as well as a "horny headpiece" from jewelry
                designer AND_i. At the same time, I'm fascinated by the fact
				that art "peers at" fashion, and that the art world has developed
                an envy complex of sorts due to the glamour, commercial success
                and mass appeal of fashion. Conversely, I'm impressed that designers
                keep peering back at the artists. Take Raf Simons, for example,
                who has flagship stores styled by artists, and who regularly
                visits art shows to view content with artistic depth and gather
                inspiration for his fashions. Indeed, this fascination isn't
                something new, nor is it mine alone, since one can trace back
                the interplay between art and fashion to the beginning of modernity.
                It started with fashion designers using works of art as models
                for their creations and, reciprocally, with the Futurist Giacomo
                Balla designing clothes in 1913.  A related idea that interests me is the luxury aspect. Art is
                de facto a luxury idiom. On the one hand, we saw this in the
                art boom that raged prior to the collapse of the market amidst
                the most recent recession. On the other, we notice the increasing
                glamour and hype that surrounds grand openings and cocktail parties
                at art exhibitions, to a point nearly matching the pomp found
                in the world of fashion shows. Additionally, we no longer speak
                only of star designers, but also of star artists. Of course,
                the question of commodification also applies to art these days.
                Take, for example, the works of Jeff Koons or Damien Hirst. The
                latter's For the Love of God is a diamond-studded scull
                that, in my view, is no more than an inflated piece of jewelry.
                With respect to high fashion, the topic of luxury is intertwined
                with haute couture, which is ultimately a handcraft and thus
                leads us back to the dressmaker who sits in the atelier and creates
                pieces by hand — as do most artists. Even fashion history
                offers plenty of excellent crossover examples, like Viennese
                men's tailor Knize, who not only mastered his craft, but also
                collaborated with the architect Adolf Loos — and subsequently
				opened the world's first "flagship meagstore" in 1913. Though
                a tailor, Knize deliberately cooperated with the greatest intellectuals
                of his day, such as Loos and the designer Ernst Dryden.  For A Way Beyond Fashion, my primary intention was to find works
                on the periphery between art and fashion. Together, the explored
                issues — relating to communication, identity, technology and
                ecological sustainability — provide exciting fashion themes,
                which in turn are analyzed from the perspective of art. Fashion
                designer Rudi Gernreich, whose level of conceptual depth and
                radicalism I set out to find in the contemporary fashion world,
                provided the historical starting point for the exhibition. I
                was immediately fascinated by Gernreich's unisex design concept,
                which he first presented at the 1970 World Expo in Osaka. There,
                he asked the male and female models to shave all of their body
                hair, including their pubic areas, and then sent them across
                the catwalk, which to me was a performance comparable in significance
                to a signature Yoko Ono action named Cut Piece. With his unisex
                and monokini designs, Rudi Gernreich thematized sexual identity
                as an important aspect of fashion. Gernreich also experimented
                with technology, toyed with unusual fabrics, including vinyl,
                plastic and paper, and created the space suit and military look. In projects by Lucy + Jorge Orta (UK and Argentina, residing
                in Paris), technological and social aspects converge. Their transformable
                rescue wear for homeless people in the Paris Metro can be worn
                as an overall, or used as a sleeping bag or tent. Orta + Orta
                don't deal with clothing as fashion, but focus instead on the
                protective function of clothing and on survival strategies. In
                Connector Mobile Village VI — Makrowear
                Ljubljana (2002), the two artists developed autonomous, modular
				"body architectures" 
                for environmental researchers, in which the latter can perform
                their scientific work in isolated areas while always remaining
                mobile with integrated laptops and cell phones. What is truly
                remarkable about Orta + Orta is their unyielding ethical commitment
                to rebel against cynical positions in the art industry, against
                selling out as artists and designers. Taking this autonomy and
                protective function a step further leads us to the question:
                How do we go about reclaiming the public space in a manner which
                places the focus on human beings as opposed to commerce? With their Umbruffla project (2005), the Acconci Studio creates
                a new concept of an umbrella whose foldable surface is made of
                reflective polyester film. When closed, the umbrella is no larger
				than a fist, but it transforms into an "umbruffla" when opened.
				Not only does the thin skin of the "umbruffla" prove to be a
                thick skin in the end, but it also provides a reflecting, camouflaged
                hideout in the urban environment as it can be fully wrapped around
				when unfolded serving as a mobile, "urban retreat" inside which
                lovers can hide out. Acconci Studio also presents another preliminary
                study entitled Magnetic Field Clothing. In both projects the
                Studio continues its relentless and visionary research concerning
                the human body and its performance in the private and public
                realm. "Fashion stopped being clothes and became value, a tool, a way
			  	of life, politics, a kind of symbolism."
				 This statement by critic
                Marilyn Bender applies to the political imperative behind the
                performances — or "wearable situations" — devised by Jenny Marketou
                (Greece, residing in New York). Marketou has heavily explored
                scents and smells, primarily focusing on the olfactory sense
                as a means of accessing memories or identifying individuals —
                "I can smell you." For ParKour (wear), 12 wearable situations
                (paper dresses) will be handed out at the entrance of apexart
                for participants to wear during the exhibition opening. Each
                piece of clothing bears texts consisting of inscriptions and
                advertising slogans circulating in the public realm — e.g., "Fragile"
				or "Freedom is the new luxury." Marketou's project thus provides
                an update of how the human body is reclaiming the public space
                through fashion similar in intent to Acconci. Marketou's interventionist
                projects play with advertising and graffiti in an effort to create
                better access to urban areas for individuals and thus wrest them
                from the dominance of cheap investor-architecture. At first, I was shocked by PIET2WEAR (2009) by Mirjana Djordjevic-Thaler,
                aka DJ MIRA* (Serbian, residing in Vienna), because the Mondrian
                icon has truly become one the most overused commercially, in
                everything from posters to fabric patterns. However, DJ MIRA*
                appropriates this icon of modernity in a surprisingly new way.
                In the video Djordjevic-Thaler poses as a static model in a terry
                cloth bathrobe whose design adapts Piet Mondrian's modular. A
                precursor to this homage is Yves Saint Laurent's wool jersey
                Mondrian tunic dress (1965-1966), a piece that first introduced
                the fashion world to the Mondrian look. The concept of treating
                a dress as a canvas is one which DJ MIRA* "foils" by hinting
                at Mondrian's ascetic neoplasticism and its inherent dogma of
                achieving a purely plastic form. Here, fashion confronts a social
                reality, whose reflection in turn demands a reflection upon the
                artist's own work. Through use of a mirroring effect to create
                the image and the soundtrack of The Beauty
                Regime, DJ MIRA* becomes
                an interactive part of the scene. In an off-site intervention, Terence Gower (Canada, residing
                in New York) dares to enter the lion's den with his installation
                Display Modern II (Hepworth), 2009 - in this case Barneys luxury
                fashion department store on Madison Avenue. There, his installation
                of papier-mache copies of original sculptures by Barbara Hepworth
                will play on the modus operandi of an art gallery amidst the
                commercial-world backdrop. I still remember going into the former
                Helmut Lang boutique in Soho and not knowing whether I just entered
                an art installation, a museum's white cube or a fashion store.
                Gower emphasizes the artificiality and factitiousness of banal,
                salable goods, whose value is boosted by adept merchandising
                techniques. With his work Hou/Jun (1997, translates as enriched, healthy
                and happy) Takehiko Sanada (Japan) proposes a radical rethinking
                of the feverish fashion industry. For a fieldwork project he
                invited around 500 members of Tokyo's Setagaya Ward district,
                to cultivate their own cotton. The cottonseeds are harvested
                and hand spun into threads to produce "Ifuko" (clothing). Sanada
                creates with these homegrown cotton very fragile sculptures in
                the shape of human bodies. Through this contemplative process,
                the artist/designer attains the state of an "enriched heart and
				mind" where he turns a fragmented, hectic world into an infinitely
                layered and interconnected life encapsulated in the "eternal
                time" as the philosopher Yukihiro Nobuhara states in reference
                to Hou/Jun. Edwina Hörl (Austria, residing in Tokyo) also refuses to follow
                popular fashion trends to create her collections. Instead, she
                continually seeks out new, socially relevant challenges. Her
                multimedia installation Dead Fashion Reborn
                - Exchange Flea Market                (2009), produced together with so+ba, examines the importance
                of flea markets as an economic niche and as a source of inspiration
                for new collections. Spectators of A Way
                Beyond Fashion are invited
                to participate directly by optionally exchanging a piece of their
                clothing. In another break with consumerism, Hörl distributes
                her specially designed toilet paper in public restrooms throughout
                Manhattan. Visitors have an opportunity to wrap themselves in
                the paper and its printed designs, to co-create ephemeral clothing
                pieces. Carla Fernández (Mexico) takes up powerful ethical and sociopolitical
                themes, while challenging the role of fashion and design in creating
                cultural identity. Mexico is of course strongly influenced by
                the USA and the fashion industry's mega brands, which often makes
                one city look like the next. Fernández works with original motifs
                and techniques, and embraces the indigenous population of the
                Yucatan and other areas of Mexico in her work. Inspired by traditional
                patterns, designs, colors and cuts, she also uses her mobile
                fashion workshop throughout Mexico to carry out design projects
                with indigenous communities, and to draw attention to their socio-economic
                situation. Together with Pedro Reyes, Fernández devises the installation
                Square Clothes for Round-Minded People (2009), in which seven
                pieces of clothing featuring a strictly geometric design of squares
                and rectangles hang from a bent steel rack. Reyes' sculpture
                is a paraphrase on Sol LeWitt's Incomplete Open Cube. Films showing
                how the individual clothing items can be worn on the body in
                a multifunctional manner run parallel to the installation. Stephanie Cumming of Liquid Loft, a dance company from Austria,
                uses slapstick-like poses to undermine media-hyped beauty ideals
                and body styling obsessions, as well as narcissism and star mania.
				As the "Anti-Lara Croft," Cumming shows how the media spectacle
                degrades our heroines from cult into mere products of the masses.
                The layers of clothing that she pulls over her body in the form
                of a second skin not only serve as a synonym for overlapping
                identities, but also offer a variety of outfit choices.  Hussein Chalayan (Cyprus, residing in London) can be considered
                as one of today's most conceptually interesting fashion designers,
                alongside Carol Christian Poell, Martin Margiela and Walter Van
                Beirendonck. His chador piece is precisely on the mark; the way
                Rudi Gernreich's unisex performance was in Osaka. His LED
                Dress                (2007), in the installation, thematizes energy and the interexchange
                that takes place with the environment — in terms of environmental
                change. Chalayan's film The Absent Presence (2005) was first
                shown as an art project at the Venice Biennale. In it, a frightful
				visions of the future plays out, where "fashion scans" are used
                to access private data and track consumer behavior; and where
                DNA data is used to keep tabs on everyone at border crossings
                and airports. Despite this apocalyptic ending note, the exhibition A
                  Way Beyond Fashion presents a selected group of artists and designers who
                blur the lines between the two domains and revise some key technological,
                ecological and socio-economic issues of our day, so that Gernreich's
                vision — "Fashion will go out of fashion" — should not become
                reality soon. Robert Punkenhofer ©2009 apexart's exhibitions and public programs are supported in
                part by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Carnegie
                Corporation of New York, Edith C. Blum Foundation, Mary Duke
                Biddle Foundation, The Greenwich Collection Ltd., The William
                Talbott Hillman Foundation, and with public funds from the New
                York City Department of Cultural Affairs and the New York State
                Council on the Arts.  |