The line around the atrium |
My notebook drawings of Savage Beauty |
The line |
Entering the exhibit |
My notebook drawings of Savage Beauty |
McQueen (b. 1969), who tragically took his own life at age 40 on February 11 of last year, demonstrated vision and skill from his earliest post-school collections. The exhibit, which artfully and successfully culls and mixes pieces from his vast store of masterpieces, shows this in the relatively pared-down, mostly monochromal early pieces that offer a short course in skillful tailoring, aesthetic refinement and innovation, and witty sexiness. His "Bumster" pants and skirt, in the Highland Rape show of 1995-96, ride so low they barely top the buttocks or pelvic bone, yet manage not to appear vulgar but deliciously stylish, offer one example. Another would be the military motif worked to exciting ends in the Joan show Autumn/Winter 1998-9 collection. Every piece in this show testifies to McQueen's technical adroitness, gifts for playing with differing and often difficult materials, colors, juxtaposition, and volume. But whether imagining tattered, post-shipwreck gowns or aluminum corsets or garbage-bag-like layered petticoats or pheasant-plumed sheaths, these pieces as a whole make clear that he achieved much more than just taking standard garments to exciting ends. As I slugged through the displays, I remembered some of the wilder shows he had staged, some provoking questions about his feelings towards women--there was the show titled Highland Rape of course, and another that staged scenes in a madhouse, a clip of which was playing in one of the exhibit rooms, and then the clothes and shoes themselves at times seemed like they would induce as much physical pain as aesthetic pleasure if worn--but what I began to think about even more was that in a sense, his work over the years seemed to be pushing constantly in the direction not only of the "romantic," the term McQueen used to describe himself and that seemingly graced almost every wall of the show, along with "futuristic," or the fantastical and gothic, though those certainly are certainly key, as would the "queer" (did that term appear--I may have missed it), but especially of the post/trans-human.
Cephalopod |
"Jellyfish" ensemble |
My notebook drawings of Savage Beauty |
Dress, Horn of Plenty |
There is one dress that I have looked at again and again, both online and in this show, that seems almost like a vision drawn from a place beyond, akin to one imagined centuries ago by Aristophanes in his play The Birds, but in this quite different Cloud Cuckoo Land, this dress would adorn the Queen or members of the exalted court--for there is nothing democratic or parliamentary about most of these clothes, I must admit--the Bird-women or Women-birds or Bird-people, and you could imagine similar garments for the king, or androgynous/trans royal as well. It is costumey and yet not. I think McQueen was giving us glimpses of post-ness and trans-ness all along, but especially by the late 1990s, and by these final collections, as he said, "There is no way back for me now. I am going to take you on journeys you’ve never dreamed were possible," (WWD, February 12, 2010); but also: "It is important to look at death because it is a part of life. It is a sad thing, melancholy but romantic at the same time. It is the end of a cycle—everything has to end. The cycle of life is positive because it gives room for new things." (Drapers, February 20, 2010). He had already begun to give us those new things, and a few of them, thankfully for all who were able to see this show, were on display here.
0 comments:
Post a Comment