Fashion Fictions

May 27, 2023 - October 9, 2023

Jun Takahashi for Undercover, Ensemble, Fall/Winter 2017–18, Courtesy of Undercover

 

[Image Description: A model with powdery white skin is posed with arms held upwards like a marionette on a dark stage in front of a red velvet curtain. She is wearing a dress designed by the Japanese designer Jun Takahashi. The dramatic garment includes a form-fitted, corset style jacket with puffed sleeves and a voluptuous, fuchsia bustle skirt constructed of silk and nylon ribbons that are sewn into a honeycomb pattern. The model’s golden hair is tied up into large donut-shaped buns, one on either side of her head.]

Fashion Fictions surveys experimental design practices that exist at the intersection of fashion and other modes of cultural production. International in scope, the exhibition explores the increasing influence of research-based, materially driven practices on the global fashion scene, while acknowledging the proliferation of creative practices that challenge the aesthetic, material and technological conventions of fashion. The title of the exhibition is drawn from artist and technologist Julian Bleecker’s influential essay “Design Fiction” (2009) in which he extends the term first coined by critic and theorist Bruce Sterling to argue that the most innovative, transformative work is produced in the spaces between fact and fiction, the present and the near future, and the scientific and the fantastical. All of the designers in Fashion Fictions occupy these liminal spaces, using fashion as a means to unite seemingly disparate sentiments and to propose new possibilities for aesthetics, bodily forms and, more ambitiously, how we exist in the world.

Drawing on various cultural traditions, science fiction, technology, and an interest in the natural world and sustainability, designers invent fashion objects that act as visual manifestations of new realities and celebrations of hybrid identities. Rather than presenting retrofuturist visions that recycle the space age imagery of the 1960s and 70s, these designers are proposing new trajectories and new possibilities for the near future. The exhibition is comprised of three thematic sections: Material Futures, which includes work that features technological and scientific innovations in materials research; Aesthetic Prophesies, which highlights designers’ fusion of cultural traditions with speculative creations; and Responsible Visions, which investigates how designers are incorporating adaptive reuse and upcycling into their explorations.

The content of the exhibition will be activated through a number of collaborations and programs, including a creative research laboratory—conceived and programmed by Material Matters from Emily Carr University of Art + Design—embedded within the exhibition space. This multipurpose lab will function as a workshop, studio space and classroom, showcasing current faculty and student work in process, representative of a local design ethos made up of critical design, critical making and critical inquiry. It will also serve as the site for a diverse array of programs, talks and design charrettes.

 

An Audio Described Tour and all of the exhibition texts are available through our mobile guide. Click on the buttons below to access the Described Tour and texts.

Described TourIntroductionExhibition DidacticsQ&A with Femke de Vries

Organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery and curated by Stephanie Rebick, Director of Publishing and Content Strategy; with contributing curators Amber-Dawn Bear Robe, Independent Curator and Indigenous Fashion Show Director, SWAIA; Siobhan McCracken Nixon, Assistant Curator; and curatorial advisor New Order of Fashion. Exhibition design by Measured Architecture.


Presented by:
Generously supported by:

The Poseley Family

Additional Support from:
Curatorial Advisor:
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Publication

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FASHION FICTIONS

 

Subverting the conventions of the fashion magazine, this heavily illustrated magazine-style publication will feature a curatorial essay by Stephanie Rebick, essays by exhibition collaborators Amber-Dawn Bear Robe, Hélène Day Fraser and Keith Doyle, as well as photo essays and short texts covering the themes explored in the exhibition. Published by the Vancouver Art Gallery and Information Office.

Edited by: Stephanie Rebick

Contributions by: Himikalas Pamela Baker; Julian Bleecker; Lucie Chan and Zoë Chan; Clinton Cuddington; Hélène Day Fraser and Keith Doyle; Amber-Dawn Bear Robe; Siobhan McCracken Nixon; Stephanie Rebick; Andrea Valentine-Lewis; and others.

184 pages
12.5 x 9.5 inches
ISBN 9781927656624
Softcover
Vancouver Art Gallery and Information Office
2023