Eleven artists transform the 2020 Lady Dior bag into their own unique work of art

 

 

 

For the 4th edition of the ‘Dior Lady Art’ project, eleven artists from around the world transformed the ‘Lady Dior’ bag into their own unique work of art. For Dior, these new reinterpretations of the Lady Dior luxury handbag are odes to freedom and creativity.

RAQIB SHAW for Lady Dior Art 2019-2020-
RAQIB SHAW for Lady Dior Art 2019/2020; @dior

Eduardo Terrazas offers up a precious tribute to Christian Dior, who dreamed of being an architect before becoming a couturier. The Mexican architect drew on Amerindian folk art techniques for his intricate, graphic reinterpretation of the Lady Dior.

African artist Athi-Patra Ruga explores society through the prism of art, crafts and pop culture. He transformed the Lady Dior into a self-portrait, with a spectacular play of embroidery and textured beading.

Korean painter Jia Lee transforms the Lady Dior into a pristine canvas imbued with her poetic, emotional vision of nature.

For Lady Dior Art, American artist Mickalene Thomas created a graphic landscape evoking Monet’s garden at Giverny. In a vibrant collage she conceived a dazzling patchwork of embroidered leather and intricate beadwork.

Joana Vasconcelos delivers a resolutely futuristic ode to love with her interpretation of the Lady Dior, featuring a beating heart illuminated by 300 LEDs. The Portuguese artist captures Dior’s avant-garde spirit in her designs.

Like bubbling magma, Kohei Nawa’s kinetic creations for Dior Lady Art change in function of temperature and light.

Marguerite Humeau merges hi-tech and tradition with her 3D-printed interpretation of the Lady Dior. French contemporary artist’s vision gave birth to a sensual, wave-like work.

Lady Dior Art 2019-2020-
Kohei Nawa (1), Marguerite Humeau (2) and Mickalene Thomas (3) for Lady Dior Art 2019/2020; @dior

Evoking the joyful atmosphere of Carnival, Brazil-born artist Maria Nepomuceno painstakingly embroidered a heady mix of flowers and mouths on her sensual creation for Lady Dior Art.

The melancholic beauty of Raqib Shaw’s imaginary paradise is transposed onto leather and embellished with dazzling enamel charms for Lady Dior Art.

Sculptor Rina Banerjee transforms the Lady Dior into a spiritual message evoking universal peace. In this video, she reveals the meaning behind designs that bring together organic materials to create a “cabinet of curiosities” for the fourth edition of Lady Dior Art.

Inspired by his ‘Coffin Paint’ series, Chinese conceptual artist Wang Guangle creates relief effects and textured movement in rainbow stripes on leather for Dior Lady Art.

 

WANG GUANGLE for Lady Dior Art 2019-2020-
WANG GUANGLE for Lady Dior Art 2019-2020; @dior
Lady Dior Art 2019-2020-artists
Lady Dior Art 2019/2020; @dior
Lady Dior Art 2019-2020
Lady Dior Art 2019/2020; @dior
EDUARDO TERRAZAS for Lady Dior Art 2019-2020-
EDUARDO TERRAZAS for Lady Dior Art 2019-2020; Lady Dior Art 2019/2020; @dior

Seijaku by Iris Van Herpen – a vibrational fashion phenomena that interacts with sound

Biomorphic ethereal volumes by Iris Van Herpen.

iris van harpen seijaku collection-

Standing for a reciprocity between craftsmanship and innovation in technique and materials, famous Dutch fashion designer Iris Van Herpen explored the study of cymatics in a new stunning couture collection presented at the L’Oratoire du Louvre in Paris. The new couture collection was titled “Seijaku” from the Japanese word and concept for finding serenity amidst life’s chaos. The Japanese musician Kazuya Nagaya created a Zen bowl sound installation to help the audience to visualize sound waves as evolving geometric patterns, In cymatics, a subset of modal vibrational phenomena, the higher the frequency of the sound wave, the more complex the visible patterns.

Iris Van Herpen continues exploring her ethos of “modern couture” bycoating thousands of hand-blown glass bubbles in transparent silicone, creating a bioluminescent prism around the body.

iris van harpen seijaku collection

Inspired by the work of the Japanese artist Kohei Nawa, van Herpen also used a similar technique to silicone-coat tens of thousands of Swarovski water drop crystals, creating a dress with the look of a wet skin covered in dew drops.

Other fabric techniques developed exclusively for the collection include stitching pearl-coated rubber fabric onto black tulle to create fossil and floral layering. A halter dress is laser cut and stretched over black wire to scroll around the body like waves of sound in a shell.

Ethereal dresses float on a 3D moiré technique in which hand-plisséed and line- printed organza is hand stitched on transparent tulle.

The lightest Japanese organza is woven from threads five times thinner than human hair and made with the traditional Shibori technique, creating unique Cymatic patterns.

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