Issey Miyake
By Sara Templeton
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The man himself:
Issey Miyake
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Issey Miyake, one of the Nihon's most respected and well-known
designers, refers to his designs not as clothing, or ready-to-wear
ensembles, but rather art pieces.
And why not? Many of the designs from Miyake et al are stunningly
beautiful, but not the kind of thing you'd wear to the cricket,
or even to dinner in some cases.
Issey Miyake thinks differently from the more orthodox designer.
Hailing from Japan, most would expect him to create 'art pieces'
with an oriental flavour.
While he will do this - and still does - he also creates
pieces that are far more westernised than most would expect.
Born in Hiroshima, Japan, in 1938, Issey Miyake was seven
years old when the USA dropped an atomic bomb on his country.
Sadly, his mother was badly burned by the bombing of Hiroshima
and died four years later. But, in an ironic twist of fate,
the American occupation of Japan that occurred after the attack
gave a young Issey a first-hand look at Western culture.
Miyake had always wanted to be a fashion designer, and in
1959 he enrolled in a graphic arts course at Tokyo's famous
Tama Art University. Five years later - in early 1965 - he
moved to Paris to fulfil his dream and started looking for
work in the Big Smoke.
Right out of the blocks, Miyake's talent was evident and
he scored a gig with Guy Laroche in only his second year in
France, which lasted from 1966, to 1968. In the year that
he ditched Laroche, he was snapped up by none other than the
Givenchy house of design.
Then in 1969 he moved to New York City to work for Geoffrey
Beene and two years later, after earning a good deal of capital,
he set up his first creative studio - the Miyake Design Studio,
or MDS, in Tokyo. This wasn't so much a place of design and
production, but a more a laboratory of sorts, where Miyake
started experimenting with various blends of fabric and synthetic
textiles.
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Issey: Mens
fashion that doesn't suck
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Soon after this in 1971, Miyake International Incorporated
was set up and the Japanese designer launched his first collection.
It was exhibited in both New York, where he was residing,
and also in Tokyo.
Miyake's first fashion show in Paris was a hit (1973) and
by '79, he had set up an arm of his design house in France.
During the '70s Miyake's work was largely conceptual - he
pioneered a vast array of techniques, many incorporating age-old
Japanese traditions - but it was the during 1980s that Miyake
stirred the soul of the masses.
Creating more affordable ensembles, Issey Miyake's trademark
of the 1980s was practicality and usefulness in fab.
Making use of natural fibres and other fabrics, painstakingly
researched at the Miyake Design Studio in Tokyo, his designs
became hugely successful, not just in high cultural circles,
either.
In the '90s Issey Miyake is largely accepted for kicking
off the pleat, which today comes and goes with fashion trends
year-in and year-out. His development of the pleating theory
revolved around first sewing garments, then finishing them,
and finally the pleating.
From here on in, Miyake's designs would influence not just
the world of fashion, but even sport. For instance in 1992,
Miyake designed the pleated jackets for the Lithuanian team
at the Barcelona Olympics.
Today Issey Miyake's designs can be purchased all around
the world, particularly here in Australia. He has quite a
following locally, and right around the world, and doesn't
look like slowing any time soon.
Links:
Issey
Miyake.com
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