Summary: Belgian Fashion Design | school

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  • 1 Weblecture the rise&influence of Belgian designers.

    This is a preview. There are 30 more flashcards available for chapter 1
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  • Which designers used deconstructionism?

    Japanese designers: Reik Kawakubo, Issey Miyake, Yohji Yamamoto, and Belgian designers: Dries van Noten, Ann Demeulenmeester, Martin Margiela.
  • Which desginers where the representetives of deconstructionism?

    The Belgian designers.
  • Which two designers are in particular the deconstructionism representitives?

    Martin Margiela and Ann Demeulenmeester.
  • What meant deconstruction to the Japanese?

    That seams should not just hold 2 pieces of fabric together but when exposed it should give energy to the design, assymetrical points and great imbalance.
  • Martin Margiela and Kawakubo and Yamamoto both put things together that actually did not belong together. But what was the difference between these Japanese designers and the Belgian designer?

    Rei Kawakubo and Yohji Yamamoto did this with new and inventive fabrics. And Martin Margiela did the opposite he used the old as it was ( he used old fabrics and let them be) Used&reused materials/clothing.
  • What is the personification of Martin Margiela?

    For many people Martin Margiela is the personification of avant-garde.
  • As what was Martin Margiela soon labelled?

    as a constructionist or rather an deconstructionist.
  • Is Martin Margiela a part of the Antwerp six?

    No, but he went to the same school in Antwerp but graduated earlier.
  • Which designer designed flat clothes, and why?

    Martin Margiela desgined this, to explore the transformation of a two-dimensional garment which becomes a three dimensional garment on the human body. He designed flat clothes with openings for the neck and arms relocated at such a way that they looked completely flat. The clothes transformed on the human body from 2 to 3 dimensional.
  • What does Martin Margiela do with her collections?

    Martin Margiela puts the pieces back again in a different form, or added to another garment which makes it deconstructionism: literally taking construction apart.
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