Monday, March 4, 2019
Fashion Theory
Its a Jungle Out There he based his design take a crap on the Thomson gazelle, found in East Africa. The collection utilize umpteen savage skins, and featured this brown fur Jacket with horns protruding from the shoulders. Macaque employ this to symbolize the congenatorship between animals and humanss. With this Jacket Macaque uses the horns as a manakin signifying power, freedom as well as survival Using this on female models signified power and strength thus giving them empowerment, which was ane of his signifier.With usage of the fierce makeup techniques, the female contour appears formidable and mighty. The symbolic representation of the horns used suggests power and the ability to defend them selves rightful(prenominal) as the Gazelles do with predators and when courting, while the leather symbols resilience. Macaque strategically places the horns on the shoulders of the Jacket, creating a broader silhouette on the female forming an androgynous profile. This then li nks to the stereotypical social structure, in which males dominate.The exaggerated shoulders appear to symbolism the limbs of the gazelle reinforcing the minimalists eaters within the design of the garment forming the commence of the human- animal hybrid. Macaque believed that like a Gazelle, humans are doomed in life and are destined to die at the hands of their predators. Just like a gazelle will be hunted and destroyed, a human will be forgotten and lost if they do not champion for their survival is society and continue to be remarked and discerned. It is ironic that although animals are commonly seen as a inferior existence in rank to humans, Macaque uses them to draw strength and power.Here the roles are reversed and unmans are relying on these beasts to represent their ennoblement signifying an substitution of power. Having said this, Macaque, with the animal symbolism, signified freedom. A freedom of expression and identity operator as an individual, as apposed to confo rming. Suzan Hens Macaque however was not the only designer to used horns as imagery and symbols within his collection to represent society finished fashion. South African born designer Suzan Haynes also used this symbolism in her newly opened store in Mellower Arch.Suzan admits to gathering her influences from her travels and photo to the natural. Haynes replaced the heads of her mannequins in her Mellower arch store with those of reindeers. Her intention of this was to create a magic trick within her store. The signifier identified is a female form with a reindeer head thus creating the hybrid. This signifies the fantasy that Suzan intends to create. The female form is positioned in such a manner in which to present a ladylike heir of grace to the mannequin. This demure stance is Juxtaposed by the use of the reindeer head. This signifies raw animal instinct.The animal instinct in this context (Store setting) is erectly related to the carnal desire in relation to consumption. It signifies that consumers should be able to give into this desire for fashion as an animal would towards their instinct. This image emphasizes human restraint opposed to animal impulse. This correlates with Roland bathes semiotic opening that links to stories and myth. He argued that there is an agenda behind communication and that agenda is ideology. The idea that the myth is a misrepresentation and has to do with covering something up and what is really going on. Inanimate and animate models and animals
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