Givenchy Fall 2012 Menswear, ©Style.com
|
Man-skirt
by Rick van Os
There has been a double standard throughout the history of everyday fashion. Whereas women have gradually exchanged their skirts for trousers from the early nineteen-hundreds onwards, men haven’t taken up the opportunity (or have been able) to incorporate the skirt in their everyday apparel. Despite the valliant efforts made by fashion visionaries such as Jean Paul Gaultier, Vivienne Westwood, Dries van Noten and Walter van Beirendonck, the phenomenon of the man-skirt hasn’t found a raison d’être outside of the high-fashion discourse. Although effortlessly adopted as a symbol of anarchy by counter-cultural groups like punks and new romantics, one might still raise questions as to why the kilt, sarong or man-skirt has evidently failed to become an indespensible item in everyday men’s fashion.
When The Fashion World of Jean Paul Gaultier was on exhibit at de Kunsthal Rotterdam in early 2013, Gaultier’s signature coned bra was probably his most sought-after piece. However, ample amount of attention should have been payed to his revolutionary, playfully gender-bending man-skirts dating back to 1985. Ever since Gaultier’s masculine interpretation of the skirt, established and up-and-coming fashion designers have actively taken up this concept as a starting point to question our wardrobe’s underlying gender binary.
Jean
Paul Gaultier Fall 2013 Menswear, ©Style.com
|
Dries
van Noten Fall 2015 Menswear, ©Style.com
|
Modemuze verbindt op een online platform de mode- en kostuumcollecties van zeven Nederlandse musea met verhalen van mode- en kostuumliefhebbers als een bron van inspiratie voor een breed publiek. In samenwerking met FASHIONCLASH festival komt Modemuze de hele maand juni met een serie blogs rondom het thema van dit jaar: ‘Gender’. Neem voor een overzicht van alle blogs een kijkje op: modemuze.nl
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten