The symposium examines the return of tailoring as an emblematic and defining attribute of contemporary
fashion design and reflects on how structured, fitted garments like the suit no longer only embody ideas of tradition, masculinity,
and respectability, but are increasingly used to disrupt concepts of sex, gender, power, and conformity.
Noted fashion
designers and fashion researchers will discuss on the role and future of tailoring in fashion with a particular attention
to gender, identities and the body.
Speakers:- Nicola Brajato (fashion
researcher, University of Antwerp)
- Peter Do (fashion designer, New York City)
- Daisy Knatchbull (founder of
The Deck London, Savile Row tailoring house for women)
- Jay McCauley Bowstead (author and fashion researcher, London)
Roundtable Discussion with Grace Wales Bonner (head of Fashion at Angewandte), Nicola Brajato, Peter Do, Daisy Knatchbull,
Jay McCauley Bowstead, and Rosalind McKever (curator, Victoria & Albert Museum London).
Moderated by Dr. Monica Titton.
Open Q & A from the audience will follow.
Pleaser register for the event via
Eventbrite.
Registered attendees will receive the Zoom link via email.
About the speakers Peter Do is dedicated to creating a new future in fashion through thoughtful design. Born in
Biên Hòa, Vietnam, Do immigrated to the suburbs of Philadelphia at the age of 14. He studied Fashion Design
at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City and was the recipient of the inaugural 2014 LVMH Graduate Prize. Do went
on to work in the RTW atelier at Céline and then at Derek Lam. Peter Do is carried in renowned retailers globally.
Jay McCauley BowsteadContemporary Menswear: Hybridity,
Flux and GlobalisationThis talk explores how designers today activate the creative potential of men’s fashion
by dissolving barriers between formerly distinct genres of clothing and by troubling polarities of identity. Addressing notions
of hybridity, the talk investigates how sporting and tailored, southern and northern, masculine and feminine, and eastern
and western references are synthesised in innovative menswear collections. Geopolitics, economics and shifts in patterns of
work and family life have exerted a considerable impact on the sartorial developments of the present day. But moments of flux
and contestation can be seen throughout the evolution of tailoring: both the Ottoman inspiration behind Charles II’s vest
[waistcoat] in the seventeenth century and the equestrian origins of the tailcoat in the eighteenth illustrate the perpetually
hybridising, evolving nature of style. By attending to the dynamic and syncretic qualities of menswear, the talk seeks to
expose the shifting tectonics that animate contemporary discourses of gender, taste and nationhood.
Jay McCauley
Bowstead is an author and researcher whose scholarly work to date has focused on masculinity, gender, and design,
as well as the relationship between ethics, fashion production and public policy. Recent publications include a special issue
of
Critical Studies in Men's Fashion (2021) co-edited with Charlie Athill; an article exploring how new
technologies interact with shifting industrial policy for
Fashion Practice (2021); a chapter on cultural
hybridity in the edited collection
Dandy Style (McCauley Bowstead in Cole and Lambert 2021); and a co-authored
article on designer Charles Jeffrey (Hitchcock and McCauley Bowstead 2020). Jay’s monograph
Menswear Revolution was
published in 2018.
Nicola BrajatoQueer(ing) Tailoring: Rethinking the
suit, gender, and sexuality for a post-tailoring material and symbolic vocabularyStarting from his research
project on the relationship between the Antwerp fashion scene and masculinities, Nicola will introduce the idea of
queer(ing)
as a methodology through the case study of Belgian fashion designer Walter Van Beirendonck. The presentation aims to offer
an investigation of Van Beirendonck’s sartorial practices through the analysis of his queer approach to tailoring. Nicola
will focus on the historical and material meanings of the suit in the making of hegemonic and heteronormative masculinity,
and how the designer has been capable of undertaking a material critical discussion of these meanings through the queering
of the suit. In order to do so, the presentation will introduce an analytical framework based on three criteria:
queer(ing)
design, queer(ing) surface and queer(ing) styling. In bringing together fashion theory, critical studies on
men and masculinities, and queer theory, the suggested framework aims to open up the sartorial practice of tailoring and its
relationship with masculinity, gender and sexuality, in order to critically engage with its normative meanings and to propose
a new understanding of its features. To conclude, some other examples of contemporary fashion attempts to rethink tailoring
and the suit will be introduced.
Nicola Brajato is a PhD candidate in fashion and gender
studies at the University of Antwerp funded by the Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO). His current research aims to investigate
the impact of Antwerp-trained designers in critically questioning the idea of masculinity, the male body and menswear.
Previously, he was research scholar at the fashion studies department of the University of Bologna with a project on fashion
archives aimed to the realisation of an exhibition on the relationship between club culture and fashion. As part of the research
project, Nicola curated the site-specific art work "Fashion in Paradise: Rimini and the Golden Age of Discoteca Paradiso".
He has published articles on the relationship between fashion, identity and the body in
Fashion Theory: The Journal of
Dress,
Body & Culture,
Critical Studies in Fashion & Beauty,
Dune: Writings on fashion,
project and visual culture (FlashArt), and
Critical Studies in Men’s Fashion.
Founded by
Daisy Knatchbull in 2019,
The Deck offers stylish, successful women an alternative to mainstream brands and
fast fashion. The Deck is a contemporary made-to-measure tailoring brand, by women, for women and the first female-only tailor
with a shopfront in the history of Savile Row.
Dr Rosalind McKever is Curator of Paintings
and Drawings at the V&A and co-curator of the exhibition
Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear. She
specialises in modern European art and is especially interested in its relationship with fashion. Prior to joining the V&A
she worked at the National Gallery, London and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Organized
and hosted by
Dr. Monica Titton.