Author: Ria

  • Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty

    savage-beauty

    There have been a few reviews on the Victoria & Albert museum’s Savage Beauty exhibition that are far more eloquent than this, but I thought I’d throw my two cents into the mix. I want to talk less about the exhibition itself though – as I said there are far more eloquent blog post surround this – and focus more on McQueen himself, the pieces he created and the legacy he left behind.

    Before delving into Savage Beauty I need to take you back to the murky depths of 2008, when I started wading into the world of fashion. My knowledge up to that point consisted of fast high street fashion, magazines such as Elle or Glamour and The Devil Wears Prada. I knew about fashion, I studied the media around it at college but it was McQueen (amongst other design houses such as Chanel and Burberry) that really made me stand up to attention and regard fashion not just as a form of personal expression but an incredible art from in it’s own right. His collections made me think, rather than just fawn over taffeta and lace, and getting to see that artistry up close was a quite an experience for me.

    Savage Beauty is really a time capsule of that feeling. Separated out thematically and starting out with his early work on Saville Row and at Central St Martins, through his most well known shows – Highland Rape, The Girl Who Lived In The Tree, Voss etc. – the whole exhibit is peppered with his quotes and thinking behind his collections.

    But what I realised as I walked through the themed halls was what I love most about McQueen’s pieces. He didn’t shroud women in protective foam or simply dress them up as china dolls. His women were beautiful but dangerous. Yes, they wore silk and were often dripping in gold but they were also the femme fatale of the fashion world.
    Despite the differences in design throughout his career, this is the theme that seemed to underscore many of his collections. The pieces were often made of the most fragile of materials – real flowers, the thinnest silk, delicate feathers but he transformed them into something tougher, more powerful and ultimately breathtaking. Just like women themselves, a McQueen piece has the power to entrance and terrify you at the same time.

    Alexander-McQueen-Fall-2006
    *image via Style.com

    This backbone of design is perfectly illustrated in my favourite look from The Widows of Culloden Fall collection in 2006, a delicate (almost bridal) lace and silk gown set off with a antlers designed by Philip Treacy. The antlered headpiece has been forced through the threadbare silk (I read at the exhibition the silk material cost around £2,000). McQueen commented that it almost looked like the model had ripped her head through the fabric in a fit of rage, and yet she looks so majestic and poised walking down the runway. The one look embodies that sense of controlled danger within all of McQueen’s pieces and lives on in Burton’s collections since he passed away.

    Underneath the over the top paraphernalia and artistry is McQueen’s Savile Row training. To say his tailoring skills were brilliant would be an insult. His approach to the creation of his pieces in my opinion, sits on the same level as the scientific precision of Charles James. It’s not surprising one of his most famous quotes was “You’ve got to know the rules to break them. That’s what I’m here for, to demolish the rules but to keep the tradition.”

    Designers often have a hard job reinventing the wheel every single season and yet Lee McQueen gave us a decade of experimentation, fantasy and intelligent pieces right until his final collection (Platos Atlantis in 2010) His legacy still stands firm and I doubt there will ever be another designer quite like him.

    I personally came away from Savage Beauty with the wind knocked out of me – and that has nothing to do with the fact that I was on my feet all day. I spent a lot of time thinking what a shame it is I couldn’t take photos of the exhibit all the way through. In hindsight it’s almost appropriate I wasn’t able to capture the sheer fantasy and beauty of what was on display. I honestly don’t think a photo round up could do it justice, his work really needs to be seen to be believed

    If you want to read more about the exhibition itself I’ll point you towards a couple of fantastic reviews that read much better than this babble I’ve produced below. If you find yourself in London before 2nd August I seriously urge you to go before tickets sell out too.

    Extra links/posts:

    R.xoxo

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  • Met Gala 2015 | Red Carpet Fashion Round Up

    It’s one of the biggest fashion fueled nights of the year. The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Annual Gala (otherwise known as The Met Gala or Met Ball) is usually one of the more opulent red carpet events – almost like the Oscars of fashion. This year the Met are celebrating the opening of China: Through The Looking Glass, an exhibition focused on the Eastern influence on Western fashion.

    As always with the Met Gala I was looking out for looks that paid a respectful tribute to the theme of the exhibition, but this year I was also looking eyeing up attendees cultural sensitivity with their ensembles i.e. less inventive attempts to appropriate Chinese culture. As a result, I’ve have never been more nervous to see a red carpet and I’ve never been more selective and judgmental over which looks to include in my round up post.

    That being said let’s get on with the show! Here’s my round up of the best looks from the Met Gala…

    MetGala15-Fan-Bingbing
    *images via Lainey Gossip

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  • Introducing The Unabridged Writer: A Personal Writing Blog

    Guys, I’d like you to welcome in the newest addition to the RCagz blog family: The Unabridged Writer!

    The Unabridged Writer header

    So the other day I was thinking ‘Hey, Ria you know you don’t have enough going on in your life both IRL and in the blogsphere? Why don’t you start up another one?’ Haha…HA!
    Yes, I’ve started yet another blog – this will be number four after Blogger’s Bookshelf and Feminist In Training too. I’m mental. I know, but let me explain a thing.

    So writing has always been a hobby of mine since way back when where I was copying out stories and put pen to paper with my overactive imagination since I knew how pick up a pencil. I’ve always loved creative writing and wanted to be an author growing up, but, as things do I reached my teens and fell off the writing bandwagon for a few years….until I did my first NaNoWriMo in my first year at University. I was immediately hooked on writing bandwagon again.

    Now that, coupled with starting all these blogs and getting in the swing of writing regularly seems to have reignited the spark to create stories again.

    I’ve kept my small hobby for writing quite private as for me writing is quite a personal experience, but if there’s anything I’ve learnt over my almost 5 years of blogging it’s that sharing experiences can be a really wonderful thing. So this is where this new blog comes in handy.

    The Unabridged Writer is a personal project chronicling my journey as I meander through writing. I kind figure if I make it public that I’m trying to write something, I’ll be held accountable for it.

    I’m hosting on Tumblr, so this definitely won’t be as formal a thing as my other blogs and it’s easier to share and reblog writing resources that way too. There won’t be a set schedule or regular posts, but I’d like to have a place where I can dump ideas and share my progress as I work on a whopping 6 semi-active writing projects (ranging from short stories to a whole season of a TV show to a fantasy series).

    You can follow me here if you have a Tumblr and you can check out my work in progress projects page here :)

    R.xoxo

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