The 3rd Fashion in Film Festival: Birds of Paradise

Festival Poster

The 3rd Fashion in Film Festival titled "Birds of Paradise" and curated by Marketa Uhlirova is now running in venues accross London--among which are the Tate, the Somerset House, the BFI Southbank, and the Barbican:

"The 3rd Fashion in Film Festival is proud to present Birds of Paradise, an intoxicating exploration of costume as a form of cinematic spectacle throughout European and American cinema.

There will be exclusive screenings of rare and unseen films, plus two special commissions as part of the season: an installation for Somerset House by the award-winning Jason Bruges Studio and a London-wide Kinoscope Parlour, an installation of six peephole machines designed by Mark Garside after Thomas A. Edison’s kinetoscopes.

From the exquisitely opulent films of the silent era, to the sybaritic, lavishly stylised underground films of the 1940s -1970s, costume has, for a long time, played a significant role in cinema as a vital medium for showcasing such basic properties of film as movement, change, light and colour. The festival programme explores episodes in film history which most distinctly foreground costume, adornment and styling as vehicles of sensuous pleasure and enchantment.

"Hemline: the Moving Screen" by Jason Bruges Studio at Somerset House

Experimental films by Kenneth Anger, Jack Smith, Ron Rice, José Rodriguez-Soltero, Steven Arnold and James Bidgood constitute one such episode. Their decadent, highly stylised visions full of lyrical fascination with jewellery, textures, layers, glittering fabrics and make-up unlock the splendour and excess of earlier periods of popular cinema, especially ‘spectacle’ and Orientalist films of the 1920s; early dance, trick and féerie films of the 1890s and 1900s; and Hollywood exotica of the 1940s."

Please, visit their site for full programming.

Students in the Body Garment Track at Parsons IDC present:

by Angeli Sion

Under the theme of love, a group of fourteen emerging artists will present and perform their varied works at Dacia Gallery on the Lower East Side this Saturday, December 11th. The presentation will traverse across diverse media such as video, performance, fashion, books, dolls, zines and illustration.

As students in the Body Garment Track in the Integrated Design Curriculum at Parsons New School for Design, they take inspiration for the exhibition's theme from their core studio titled Love. They describe Love as a "Collaborative collision collage of mammoth love-orgy proportions between 14 creative beings – alive, afoot, and well prepared to be inspired" under the direction of artists and fashion designers Susan Cianciolo and Gabriel Asfour.

The event is from 6:00 PM to 10:00 PM at Dacia Gallery on 53 Stanton Street between Eldridge and Forsyth.

For more information, please visit Dacia Gallery's website

Fashion in Film Presents The 10th Victim by Elio Petri

Still from The 10th Victim (1965)

Coming up Tuesday December 7th is the last installment of the Melodrama: Fashion in Film Series curated by Jeffrey Lieber, Assistant Professor of Visual Culture Studies at Parsons the New School for Design.

The series explores "fashion as a key to the melodramatic imagination," and has so far included Imitation of Life by Douglas Sirk (1959) and Lili Marleen by Fassbinder (1981), introduced by John Epperson and Tom Kalin, respectively. The last film—perhaps the least known of the three—is the 1965 sci-fi The 10th Victim (orginally La Decima Vittima), directed by Elio Petri. The film, which will be introduced by Evan Calder Williams, stars Marcello Mastroianni and Courrèges-clad Ursula Andress and Elsa Martinelli.

The series is presented by the School of Art and Design History and Theory at Parsons, in conjunction with the MA in Fashion Studies.

Self-reliant Fashion Design--Politics and Practices in Fashion Design: The case of Buenos Aires

It's exciting to report on the great number of conferences happening in the field of fashion studies, which helps one grasps the cross-cultural and geographically diverse scope of the phenomenon. Alessandra Vaccari, an Italian scholar based at the University of Bologna, is organizing a conference in Buenos Aires in conjunction with the new masters launched by the University of Bologna, Buenos Aires. The conference, which is taking place November 11, is organized in collaboration with the Centro Metropolitano de Diseño.

For detailed information on the conference, see below:

Thursday 11 November 2010, 17.30-21.00

Auditorium, University of Bologna Rodríguez Peña 1464, Buenos Aires

The forum explores the role and activism of self-reliant fashion designers in the development of a new perception of fashion scene and system. The term “self-reliant” designates here a relatively high degree of independence from fashion industry; strong control and decision-making power over research, creative process, production, and communication; output ranging from one-offs to small series; close relationship with end users.

The self-reliant practice is not necessary a goal, but it is the condition in which new generations of designers increasingly work with an enhanced attention to cultural and ethical dimensions of fashion, often after the achievement of an academic qualification in fashion design.

The forum investigates what has become a global phenomenon, which is particularly interesting to study either in the presence of powerful fashion and textile industry (e.g. Italy), or when such an industry is weak, as is the case of contemporary Argentina. The forum involves designers, media and fashion institutions’ representatives, academics, and students, who are invited to express and discuss their views. Which are the creative strategies that self-reliant practices entail? What is the role of fashion oriented small medium sized enterprises? How do self-reliant fashion designers interact with urban and social space? Are they the product of the current trend toward academisation in design education? And which are the relationships between them and the public institutions promoting design and creative industries? These are some of the key questions that the project seeks to answer.

Project Alessandra Vaccari

Co-ordination Vicky Salías y Alessandra Vaccari

University of Bologna, Buenos Aires

Programme

17.30 Introduction Alessandra Vaccari (University of Bologna)

17.40 Panel 1: Policies Andrea Saltzman (Universidad de Buenos Aires) Celia Turquesa Topper (Universidad Argentina de la Empresa) Daniela Sartori y Cesar Albarracín (Cèsartori) Marina Pérez Zelaschi (Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Industrial) Pablo Ramírez (Ramírez) Sofìa Marré (Fundación Pro Tejer) Vicky Salías (Centro Metropolitano de Diseño)

Panel 1 Co-ordinator Vicky Salías

19.10 Coffee break

19.30 Panel 2: Practices Emiliano Blanco y Camila Milesi (Kostüme) Javier Estebecorena (HE Hermanos Estebecorena) Jimena Nahon (Catalogue) Marcelo Giacobbe (Marcelo Giacobbe) Mariana Szwarc (Salsipuedes) Vicente Donato (Università di Bologna) Victoria Lescano (Pagina/12) Yumico Takemoto (HP France)

Panel 2 Co-ordinator Victoria Lescano

University of Bologna, Buenos Aires + 54 11 4878 2900 informes@unibo.edu.ar

Centro Metropolitano de Diseño, Oficina de Moda, Buenos Aires +54 11 4126 2967 oficina.modaba@gmail.com

"Locating Fashion/Studies" Symposium at Parsons the New School for Design

Locating Fashion/Studies is instead taking place on Novmber 12 and 13 at Parsons in conjunction with the newly launched MA in Fashion Studies and is organized by its director Heike Jenss in collaboration with dean Hazel Clark. In their own words:

"This symposium marks the launch of the new MA Fashion Studies program in the School of Art and Design History and Theory at Parsons. Placing an emphasis on fashion as material culture, scholars whose work spans multiple disciplines discuss their work in the diverse field of fashion studies. Topics range from collecting and exhibiting in the museum and in multiple sites in the global fashion industry; global denim; the fashioning of masculinities; and image production in New York modeling agencies.

Speakers include Christopher Breward, Cheryl Buckley, Otto vonBusch, Joanne Eicher, Francesca Granata, Susan B. Kaiser, Alexandra Palmer, Stephanie Sadre-Orafai, Valerie Steele, Sophie Woodward, and members of Parsons' faculty."