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Woven silk train for an evening dress, France or Britain, c. 1897-1905. Image Vee Speers © V&A

FASHIONED FROM NATURE

Fashioned from Nature
21/4/2018-27/1/2019
Generously supported by the European Confederation of Flax and Hemp - CELC with further support from G Star RAW Fashion, Gallery 40 vam.ac.uk/FashionedFromNature | #FashionedFromNature
 
A pineapple fibre clutch-bag, Emma Watson’s Calvin Klein dress made from recycled plastic bottles and a cape of cockerel feathers are amongst the 300 beautiful, intriguing and unsettling objects from the V&A’s most recent major fashion exhibition. 

Posted 19 June 2018

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Fashioned from Nature traces the complex relationship between fashion and the natural world since 1600. It shows how fashionable dress recurringly draws on the beauty and power of nature for inspiration, with exquisite garments and accessories from Christian Dior, Dries van Noten and Philip Treacy. It explores how fashion’s processes and constant demand for raw materials damage the environment, featuring campaigners and protest groups that have effectively highlighted this issue such as Fashion Revolution and Vivienne Westwood. It looks at the role of design in creating a better, more sustainable fashion industry. 

Speckled Crimson Ruff by
Michelle Lowe-Holder, ‘Flock & Fold’
Collection AW11,
Photography by Polly Penrose

The exhibition showcases contemporary designers of desirable, creative and sustainable popular fashion. Menswear and womenswear from Stella McCartney, known for a commitment to and success in developing new alternative sustainable materials, is displayed alongside an upcycled dress by Christopher Raeburn. At the 2016 Met Gala, actor Emma Watson wore a Calvin Klein look made from recycled plastic bottles. With separate parts, it was intended to be re-worn in different ways. The look was created as part of the ‘Green Carpet Challenge’ with Eco-Age, an initiative to pair sustainability with glamour. It is shown with a floral dress from Erdem’s Green Carpet Challenge collection.
 
Fashioned from Nature draws attention to the use of innovative fabrics. Vegea use grape waste from the wine industry to form a leather-substitute and their Grape gown is on show, as is a Ferragamo ensemble made from ‘Orange Fiber’ derived from waste from the Italian citrus industry and an H&M Conscious dress made from recycled shoreline plastic. 

Ensemble, Stella McCartney, Winter 2017
© Stella McCartney

Pine Marten fur hat, Caroline Reboux, 1895
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Earrings made from heads of Red Legged
Honeycreeper birds, circa 1875
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Greenpeace printed cotton t-shirt,
Britain, 1990s
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Cellulose acetate evening coat (detail),
designed by Alix, Paris, 1936
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London
15. Greenpeace Detox Catwalk in Bandung

The exhibition looks to the past 400 years of fashion to explore what we can learn from fashion practice in the past, with objects dating to the early 1600s. Items include an 1875 pair of earrings formed from the heads of two real Honeycreeper birds – a hugely popular item sold in enormous volume at the time – and a 1860s muslin dress decorated with the iridescent green wing cases of hundreds of jewel beetles. They are shown alongside natural history specimens to indicate the ways fashion has used animal materials in its designs and production.
 
The natural world has always provided rich inspiration for beautiful fashion. This is shown in displays of exquisite garments from the historic to the contemporary. They range from a 1780s man’s waistcoat, expertly embroidered with a pattern of playful Macacque monkeys, to Gucci’s contemporary bag decorated with stag beetle motifs. One of the earliest pieces in the exhibition, a women’s jacket from the early 1600s, is intricately embroidered with designs of pea-shoots and flowers. A 2016 Giles Deacon haute-couture dress features a pattern of delicate bird’s eggs, whilst gowns from Jean Paul Gaultier (1997) and Busvine (1933-4) both feature leopard print. 

The exhibition also focuses closely on the raw materials used in the production of fashion. Arranged chronologically, it introduces the main fibres used in the 17th and 18th centuries – silk, flax, wool and cotton – as well as now controversial materials like whalebone, demonstrated by an x-ray by Nick Veasey of a pair of 1780s stays, and turtle shell, used in a fan from 1700. It goes on to chart the expansion in international trade, import of precious materials, and later introduction of man-made materials, which brought fashionable dress to the masses but also contributed to the air and water pollution to which the textile industry is such a significant contributor.
 
A bold display of posters, slogan clothes and artworks show how protest movements have helped draw attention to the harmful side of fashion. Figures like Vivienne Westwood have popularised these issues and a mannequin pays homage to an outfit worn by her whilst protesting against climate change. A man’s outfit from Katharine Hamnett’s 1989 ‘Clean Up or Die’ collection is on show alongside posters from Fashion Revolution, a collective aiming to change the way clothes are sourced, produced and consumed. Customising and re-wearing clothes are highlighted through a vintage outfit and a jacket customised by London designer Katie Jones for fashion writer and editor Susie Lau to wear during Fashion Revolution Week 2015. 

Suit, camouflage printed cotton,
designed by Richard James, 1998
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Outfit made from leather off-cuts and
surplus yarn, Katie Jones, 2017
Photograph by Rachel Mann

Calvin Klein Green Carpet Challenge
dress worn by Emma Watson to the
MET Gala 2016
Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

Cape of curled cockerel feathers,
Auguste Champot, France, ca. 1895
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London

‘Grape’ dress (detail) made with Vegea,
a leather alternative made from
grape waste © Vegea

The exhibition presents a range of solutions to reducing fashion’s impact on the environment from low water denim and using wild rubber to more conceptual and collaborative projects. These include a dress grown from plant roots by the artist Diana Scherer, who uses seed, soil and water to train root systems into textile-like material, a bio-luminescent genetically-engineered silk dress created by Sputniko!, the MIT Lab and the National Institute of Agricultural Science (NIAS), South Korea, and a tunic and trousers made from synthetic spider silk from Bolt Threads x Stella McCartney.
 
Centre for Sustainable Fashion (CSF) at London College of Fashion, UAL, present two interactive installations which explore ‘Fashion Now’ and ‘Fashion Future.’ ‘Fashion Now’ takes five iconic contemporary fashion pieces and using sensors, visitors are able to explore the unseen impact on nature of the construction, making, wearing and discarding of each item. ‘Fashion Future’  immerses viewers into the fashion world of the future, inviting us to question what fashion means and show us a future we are yet to imagine. 

Man’s silk waistcoat embroidered in silk with
a pattern of macaque monkeys, 1780–89
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Jacket and jeans of Cradle to Cradle Certified™ denim fabric at the Gold Level, shirt and boots, G-Star RAW, 2018, Netherlands. © G-Star RAW

Embroidered linen jacket, 1620s
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London

- Admission £12 (concessions available). V&A Members go free.
- Advance booking is advised – this can be done in person at the V&A; online at vam.ac.uk/fashionedfromnature; or by calling 0800 912 6961 (booking fee applies).
- Fashioned from Nature is curated by the V&A’s Edwina Ehrman
- Centre for Sustainable Fashion (CSF) at London College of Fashion, UAL, have acted as special advisors to the exhibition. The CSF installations are curated by Professor Dilys Williams, founder and Director of CSF, and Ligaya Salazar, Director, Fashion Space Gallery with help from London College of Fashion MA Fashion Futures students.
- It is accompanied by a new V&A publication
- The exhibition is the latest in the V&A’s series of revelatory fashion exhibitions and follows Balenciaga: Shaping Fashion (2016 – 17), Undressed: A Brief History of Underwear (2016 – 2017), Shoes: Pleasure and Pain (2015 – 2016) and Club to Catwalk: London Fashion in the 1980s (2013 – 2014).
- The V&A’s fashion collection is designated as the UK’s National Collection and is one of the largest and most comprehensive collections of dress in the world.
 
About the European Confederation of Flax and Hemp - CELC
From grower to point of sale, the European Confederation of Flax and Hemp – CELC, brings together all players in the European flax fibre industry. Founded in 1951, CELC is the specialist representative of 10,000 enterprises in 14 European countries, overseeing the fibre, from plant to finished product. Its reach extends internationally by stimulating innovation and building on the values of natural fibres with established environmental qualities.

About G-Star RAW Founded in 1989, G-Star RAW remains driven by the philosophy of “Just the Product”. With this dedication to quality and progress, the brand represents the forefront of the denim industry, producing pioneering styles and challenging industry standards. Innovation and sustainability are  at the core of the G-Star DNA and the brand is committed to lead by example and develop sustainable solutions for the future of fashion. 

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VICTORIA AND ALBERT MUSEUM
Cromwell Rd, Knightsbridge, London SW7 2RL, UK
+44 (0)20-7942 2000
vam.ac.uk

Silk train (detail), woven with a pattern
of roses, c.1890s
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London

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