We are happy to announce the special partnership of Belgian model Hannelore Knuts and the ModeMuseum Hasselt in Belgium for a unique exhibition from March 27th 2010, displaying works from a wealth of international creative talent. With a distinguished modelling career spanning a decade, Hannelore has worked in the most prestigious fashion houses, crossed paths with many of the world’s best fashion photographers, and met many interesting artists from Belgium and elsewhere along the way. As well as a learned photographer, Hannelore is currently the model ambassador for Antwerp-based AIDS awareness charity, Designers Against Aids.
Curating the exhibition herself, Hannelore has called upon ‘connected souls’ to contribute to ‘ULTRAMEGALORE‘, including A#3’s Haider Ackermann – from whose magazine comes the above poster image by Inez Van Lamsweerde & Vinoodh Matadin.
The exhibit will include a fashion selection from the likes of Jean Paul Gaultier, Prada, Rick Owens and several Belgian designers, such as Haider, A.F Vandevorst and Maison Martin Margiela.
Complementing the physical garments will be fashion photography from the likes of Juergen Teller, Ronald Stoops, Miles Aldridge, Alex Salinas and Serge Leblon.
Also displayed will be artistic works by Kendell Geers, David Sherry, Luc Tuymans, Elizabeth Peyton and more.
ULTRAMEGALORE promises to be a landmark event for the small museum, located in Hannelore’s birth city of Hasselt, and is set to attract significant critical attention for the exciting content and scale of the project. While Hannelore insists it is not retrospective nor homage to the ’supermodel’, we are promised a confronting insight into her artistic and cultural sphere. One surely not to miss.
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ULTRAMEGALORE – Fashion Icon Testimony
(27th March – 6th June 2010)
Modemuseum Hasselt
Gasthuisstraat 11
3500 Hasselt
Belgium
A MAGAZINE curated by Maison Martin Margiela ONLINE NOW
Returning to the early days of our journey we are delighted to present A#1, curated by Maison Martin Margiela in 2004 – the first in the numerical series of A after the founding issues by Dirk Van Saene (NºA), Bernhard Willhelm (NºB), Hussein Chalayan (NºC) and Olivier Theyskens (NºD).
Maison Martin Margiela is known for a subversive, intellectual and often satirical style that permeates through a signature white-washed world, becoming famous in the 90’s for its deconstructed garments and guerilla fashion shows – the antithesis of populist fashion of the times, and a vein being explored in parallel by Comme des Garçons designer Rei Kawakubo in Japan.
Please click here to see A#1 online at WWW.AMAGAZINECURATEDBY.COM, with another back issue released each month. A#2 by Yohji Yamamoto, A#3 by Haider Ackermann, A#4 by Jun Takahashi, A#5 by Martine Sitbon, A#6 by Veronique Branquinho, A#7 by Kris Van Assche and A#8 by Riccardo Tisci are also all available to view online now.
The Maison Martin Margiela held their haute couture week presentation yesterday in Paris, with an afternoon of audiences coming and going from an intimate curtained salon in the Maison des Métallos, in the 11th district. With an automatic curtain sliding across to reveal the eleven silhouettes, the Maison delivered a coherent theme of mid-20th century evening gowns reworked into hybrid silhouettes, or ‘garment morphing’ as they called it. Each look was announced by a deep resonating voice over loudspeakers, describing the deconstructed outfits and their original forms and fabrications. A white spotlight centred upon each piece, keeping the models faces in darkness, in the tradition of foundation couture presentations – focusing solely on the garment and not the beautiful models.
Since 1988, Margiela has been offering Line 0, an artisanal collection for women that takes vintage and used objects to construct one-of-a-kind unusual sartorial creations. Past pieces include a jacket crafted from a mirror ball, a dress from vinyl records, and a coat of artificial eyelashes. This season traded the wit and tongue-in-cheek innovation of seasons past, rather focusing on a tension between the original garments and their modern day re-pros. The idea of static frameworks contrasting with the flow and drape of silk and taffeta was key, with the skeleton of one tuxedo coat outlined with black pearls, and a layered ballgown reworked into a dramatic one shouldered bodysuit. In another piece, layers of mirror were sliced to create a 3-d mirror dress, and one outfit was entirely adorned with pearls from waistcoat to boots. Each piece took a minimum of fourteen hours to make, some needing up to sixty five hours for embroidery and detailed feather work.
See the video below, where the voice of the Maison announces:
“Number 6: Chloé is wearing a cocktail jacket and pearl-pants. Three cocktail dresses in taffetas changeant from the 1980s are dismantled and gathered into an evening jacket. The first one – a long gown – becomes an extra long sleeve. The second one hugs half of the bust to finish into a voluminous shoulder. The third one covers the other half of the bust and creates a ruffled sleeve. A pyjama pants is made of strings of black pearls.”
Jacket: 45 hours
Pants: 35 hours
Certainly an unconventional approach to couture, Maison Martin Margiela creates a most avant-garde concept for the most historically classic and rigorously structured week of the fashion schedule. With the sense of change in the air after Martin’s official departure, this presentation remained strong in it’s through-line, and although maybe lacking the humour of the past, wavered little in the vision of the house.
WOOHOO ROUND TWO. Our friends from FASHEMATICS.com have done it again, this time on a look from Maison Martin Margiela FW 09 exclusively for A MAGAZINE curated by Maison Martin Margiela!
What do you get when you cross:
A cassette tape [MMM loves to transform everyday objects into couture-like garments]
+
A map of South America [Maybe that is where Martin is hiding??]
??
Well of course you get
Anne Vyalitsyna in MMM FW09!
The Sydney based team of Jonathan Zawada and Shane Sakkeus are also responsible for cult fashion comic Petit-Mal. Thanks again guys, you are amazing.
June 2009 we released A#4 by Jun Takahashi, the street punk whiz behind cult Japanese label UNDERCOVER.
Above check out the magazine in video form, to see it page by page, click here
Our blog [A BLOG curated by] is running full steam ahead with exciting news, articles, images and videos from UNDERCOVER events, shows, and in-depth information into the people behind A#4. Check it out and subscribe in your reader! CLICK HERE
We release A MAGAZINE curated by HAIDER ACKERMANN online on July 15th, 2009. Stay tuned as we delve into his imagination, and the worlds of the intensely creative and beautiful people who surround Haider Ackermann, the Belgian womenswear designer.