Tag Archives: Vogue

Cherry Blossom Festival, Washington DC

Spring is officially here in Washington. Today I went to see the cherry blossoms they are not all out yet so I might come back next week. But I don´t regret going because I came across a Japanese cultural perormance which started off like a Kabuki theater and finished with a jazz funk dance to Madonna’s Vogue. While witnessing it I thought to myself how incredibely creative people are, we think that everything is said and done but it always facinates me how people can come up with something new by blending together the unblendable. It’s like a watching a sunset, you know how it looks like but you understand it’s going to be different everytime you see it. (That’s why I put up some sunset pics for you).

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And the sunset shots

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Reviving Iranian ‘Vogue’

There was a time when…

Iran was a Fashion Mecca of the Middle East

There was a time when…

Iranian women dressed according to the latest Paris fashion trends

There was a time when…

Iranian cinemas showed Western movies

There was a time when…

There ruled a King and his beautiful Queen in Iran

Vogue
Vogue

These day are gone… But pictures are here to stay

I couldn’t wait to share these wonderful collection of photos made in December 1969 by Vogue photographer Henry Clarke. You will find more pics here and here.

Vogue Iran2
Isfahan, 1969

Henry Clarke photographed his models in Tehran, Isfahan, Shiraz and ancient ruins of Pasargad and Persepolis. Just by looking at this beautiful shots don’t you feel like this is kind of what it was meant to be?

The history of Iranian Vogue finished after 1979  for the country but not for its people.

In 2010 a popular Iranian-American director and artist Shirin Neshat was photographed by Vogue Italy.

ShirinNeshat for Vogue

ShirinNeshat for Vogue1

And in 2011 a famous and rather controversial (because she is now banned from visiting her homeland after her nude photos were published) actress Golshifteh Farahani also appeared in Vogue France and I would say having a quite similar look.  Again black-and-white and a bit masculine.

GolshiftehforVogueGolshiftehforVogue1

I have no understanding of whether the image was chosen on purpose or whether it has some under-the-surface meaning, I just fell in love with those feminine pictures of 1969 and I want those times back. Inshallah…

From The Canvas To The Runway

If we agree with Ricciotto Canudo that cinema is the seventh art that incorporates all of the visual arts together such as architecture, sculpture, painting, music, poetry (literature) and dance then what about fashion? I see designers drawing their inspiration from all the 7th arts, does it make fashion the 8th point on the list?
Well, with my high appreciation of it I wouldn’t say so. While creating an outfit, first and foremost, designers should see this image of their work already to determine what kind of look they are going for. Then they pick up a piece of paper and a pencil and begin forming up their vision in a sketch.
Images, looks, sketches – it all sounds like… a painting. A fashion design is a great way to reference a period of history, a public figure, national culture, art movement and etc.

So in today’s post I want to share some fashion ideas that were inspired by well-known modern art paintings, sometimes so well-know that we don’t know where it came from.
As you probably know modern art started paving its way into the world at the end of 19th century. It was all about change: change of the subject-matter, change of painting methods, and change of the audience. Now the painting doesn’t have to be flawless and balanced in a classical way, it doesn’t belong to that mantelpiece in the house of some rich person. It is from now on of the people, by the people, or the people.
The painters are looking back at the nature, admiring its colorful and simple beauty, they don’t think about the concept, they feel. Get the impression, make it your expression.

Inspired in my opinion by Claude Monet, Vincent Van Gogh and Emil Nolde extremely vivid and colorful paintings.

The world started to open up and expand, the artist who tired of looking up to antiquity or renaissance as their shiny examples were happy to discover Japanese prints, African masks, prehistoric cave paintings.

Some like Paul Gauguin left hustle and bustle of Paris for an exotic place where one could paint with freedom with no standards and borders. Gauguin was the first to depict that unusual beauty of Tahitian women. I bet one of his models might have looked like Naomi Campbell. Here is the Vogue tribute to the artist and his works.

Gustav Klimt is another painter who had a significant influence on fashion. His works were rich in decoration especially in gold leaf tresses and metallic elements that really sparked up the clothes.

Dior did a great job in showing off this style.

Despite bright colors, diverse cultures and elaborate décor, fashion gets inspired by stories behind the canvas, say, fairy tale characters.

These looks are echoing Mikhail Vrubel´s “Swan Princess” painting.

I appreciate the design but I personally would go with a different type of make-up here. I think it ruins the romantic flair of the character and makes it colder than it truly is.

If you needed to choose a painting to describe your desired outfit what it would be?

Related Article:

A Painter’s Canvas on a Designer’s Runway

Miro, Malevich, Mondrian – Art Protestors Who Inspire High Fashion