Showing posts with label Bastian Visch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bastian Visch. Show all posts

Monday, 11 July 2016

10 years of Lichting

Bastian Visch
Exposition: an overview of 10 years Lichting 

During the Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Amsterdam all winners of the past 10 years of the Lichting where showcased. In this exhibition there where also looks from also other finalists, making it a nice trip down memory lane of the last 10 years of the one of the most relevant platforms for Dutch fashion talent.
To name a few names; Bastian Visch, David Laport, Marije de Haan, Duran Lantink, Ann Boogaerts, and Sanne Schepers who is now one of the creative minds behind the successful brands FUTURA.



Saturday, 30 January 2016

Ode to Dutch Fashion at Gemeentemuseum Den Haag

Exhibition 'Ode to Dutch Fashion' is on display until February 7th 2016

Hurry up because the exhibition 'Ode to Dutch Fashion' is closing on February 7th.
The exhibition gives an overview of the most important developments in Dutch fashion scene. On display you can see Metz & Co eveningwear form the 20ies, iconic Viktor & Rolf pieces, innovative Iris van Herpen 3dprinted dresses but also new names such as Bastian Visch and Liselore Frowijn.

With 'Ode to Dutch Fashion', Gemeentemuseum Den Haag highlights the most influental designers that have
placed the Netherlands firmly on the map as a country of idiosyncratic fashion talent.
Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, which has one of the most important fashion collections in the world, provided a first ever major exhibition showcasing the history of Dutch fashion in the Netherlands.

What else can you see in the exhibition
Anyone who saw King Willem-Alexander’s coronation cannot fail to recall the dazzling blue creation – a Jan Taminiau design – worn by Queen Máxima. The Netherlands is home to a huge amount of creativity, and this has certainly not gone unnoticed abroad. Designers with their own strong signature have been particularly successful at rising above the crowd and gaining a strong reputation. Gemeentemuseum Den Haag is proud to present a well-deserved Ode to these designers this autumn, and to show how fashion has developed in this country since 1900.



Following international 
trends In the seventeenth century the Dutch elite liked to appear in portraits dressed in dignified black. However, a closer look reveals more than fifty shades of black: from ‘crow black’ to ‘coal black’ and ‘glossy black’. From that time until well into the twentieth century the Dutch followed international fashion, sometimes adapted to their own taste. In the eighteenth century, for example, a great deal of blue silk was worn in the Netherlands, while the French preferred brighter colours like emerald green or lemon yellow. Fashion consciousness grew in the nineteenth century. The Dutch closely followed the latest international trends and the arrival of the luxury department store Hirsch (from Brussels) helped prompt the emergence of a real luxury goods industry towards the end of the century.


Idiosyncratic design 
The first fashion designers to work under their own name in the Netherlands, like Joan Praetorius in the 1920s, continued to follow the lead of Parisian couture for a long time. Praetorius’ designs were admired for their ‘clean lines’ and also their ‘Dutch simplicity and quality’. After the Second World War a whole generation of Dutch designers emerged, including Max Heymans, Dick Holthaus, Frans Molenaar, Fong Leng and Frank Govers. In the 1960s they turned their attention away from Paris, developing their own distinct style, featuring lots of black-and-white, a keen eye for line and shape, and also explosions of colour and idiosyncratic touches. From then on, fashion design courses in the Netherlands, particularly in Arnhem, focused on concept. This resulted in a host of creative designers, who put conceptual Dutch design firmly on the international map in the 1990s.


Major annual fashion exhibition 
Almost ten years ago the Gemeentemuseum presented an exhibition entitled Fashion NL about the young designers of the time. Since then, fashion has been a recurring theme in the annual schedule of exhibitions. ‘Gemeentemuseum Den Haag has a long tradition of presenting fashion, with a clear emphasis on Dutch fashion’, director Benno Tempel explains. ‘Frans Molenaar had a solo exhibition here in the 1980s, for example. But we also frequently work with major foreign fashion houses. This took quite a lot of effort in the beginning, but now they know us and come to us themselves. We recognise the importance of fashion and that is reflected in our exhibitions policy.’



 Photography and design of exhibition 
Ode to Dutch Fashion will feature more than a hundred creations from the history of fashion in the Netherlands from 1900 to 2015. The exhibition has been designed by Maarten Spruyt and Tsur Reshef. The accompanying catalogue will be published by Waanders & de Kunst, and will include articles by Bianca du Mortier, Pascale Gorguet Ballesteros, Madelief Hohé and Georgette Koning. The photographs are by Sabrina Bongiovanni, who has photographed the historical collection and modern designs in typically Dutch settings: on a dike, in a tulip field, and amid the bustle of the city.

For more information:  http://www.gemeentemuseum.nl

Thursday, 31 July 2014

Lichting 2014, supported by V&D

winner Bastian Visch




























Lichting 2014 supported by V&D at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Amsterdam

Traditionally the Lichting show is always one of the highlights of the July edition of Amsterdam Fashion Week. Lichting was founded in 2007 to bridge the gap between the academy graduates and the fashion industry. Lichting is a selection of the very best of each of Holland’s seven fashion academies. Unlike the previous six editions, the 2014 Lichting made possible by V&D, the biggest department store of The Netherlands.
Each academy presented their best graduates and therefore you could say all of them are winners. 14 talented designers competed with each other within in a great show full of promise and authentic ideas. This edition the menswear collections where in particular very strong. Bastian Visch, Royal Academy of Fine Arts graduate won the Lichting 2014 award with his striking menswear collection 'Light Studies'.
 “In my work I strive for a scientific approach to design that is unifying for humanity. To achieve an objective essence of aesthetics that erases barriers between cultures, I had to find something that is defining for beauty everywhere. Instead of using an aesthetic defined by hand I needed to let nature define the impression. I managed to find a way to permanently capture sunlight shining on textile with a photographic process. The chosen shapes and colours are the result of mixing a vast amount of cultures and subcultures, and of how shapes and colours occur naturally in nature.” 

His price is that he can design a capsule collection for V&D. This collection will be available in V&D stores in the spring of 2015. That is something to look forward to.

Designers & Academies 

MAFAD Maastricht Academy of Fine Arts and Design – Dusty Thomas, Milou van Esch
AMFI Amsterdam Fashion Institute – Lisi Herrebrugh, Lotte van Dijk
ArtEZ Institute of the Arts Arnhem - Vera Roggli, Wieke Sinnige
Gerrit Rietveld Academy (Amsterdam) – Marije Seijn, Klára Válková
HKU The Utrecht School of Arts – Dennis Bareiro, Joëlle Baten
KABK Royal Academy of Fine Arts The Hague – Bastian Visch, Gino Anthonisse
WDKA The Willem de Kooning Academy Rotterdam – Afra Engel, Lola van Praag

Panel 
The winner was chosen by a diverse group of fashion professionals and a group of leading international professionals. This year the panel was formed by Marlo Saalmink (Creative Consultant, Lecturer, Journalist and Brand consultant), Lotte Mostert (fashion designer and product developer and previous Lichting candidate), Jo Simpson (stylist and senior lecturer at Central Saint Martins) and Mathew Stevenson-Wright (menswear fashion editor Wallpaper Magazine). Lichting 2014, the seventh edition, is a project of HTNK Fashion Recruitment & Consultancy, and FashionWeek Nederland, in collaboration with V&D.

http://www.lichting.nl

Report published on KALTBLUT Magazine.

All images are by brankopopovicblog

Dutch Fashion Graduates 2014 at Modefabriek

Tijme Veldt
Selection of promising fashion talents at the summer edition of Modefabriek 2014.
This selection of 2014 graduates from Dutch fashion academies is curated by Carlo Wijnands.

All images © brankopopovicblog


























Saturday, 15 September 2012

Infinite Symmetry by David Joosten

Graduation Project by David Joosten





















Camera, Edit & Set design: David Joosten
Styling: Manouk Hasebos
Make-up & Hair: Hanny van Snippenberg
Models: Sarah van den Brink at ELVIS Models, Lucas Sloot at 77 Models & Felix Schellekens Clothes by (in order of appearance): You Wie, Hellen van Rees, Walter Van Beirendonck, Manouk Hasebos and Bastian Visch

http://davidjoosten.com/

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