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Contemporary Japanese Fashion: The Mary Baskett Collection
October 17, 2009 - April 11, 2010

In the 1970s and early 1980s, Japanese designers Issey Miyake, Rei Kawakubo and Yohji Yamamoto shocked the fashion world by introducing avant-garde styles that challenged received Western notions of "chic." Informed in part by Japanese traditions such as the kimono, obi and the art of origami, these designers produced radical garments with shapes and textures often incongruous with the natural contours of the human body. Their designs - characterized by asymmetry, raw edges, unconventional construction, oversized proportions and monochromatic palettes - effectively overthrew existing norms and set the stage for the postmodernist movement in the fashion industry. Miyake, Yamamoto, and Kawakubo remain three of the most successful designer's in today's fashion world, and under their tutelage a new generation of Japanese talent has emerged.

This exhibition, an expanded version of an earlier showing at the Cincinnati Art Museum, will include approximately 40 garments from the collection of Mary Baskett, an art dealer and former curator of prints at the Cincinnati Art Museum who has been collecting and weaving Japanese high fashion since the 1960s.








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Gift Wrapping with Textiles: Stylish Ideas from Japan


Japanese Bamboo Baskets: Meiji, Modern and Contemporary

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Kimono and the Colors of Japan: Kimono Collection of Katsumi Yumioka


Opaque Shawl - Nawal Gebreel

Pleats Tote, Large - Issey Miyake


Pleats Tote, Small - Issey Miyake

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The Otaku Encyclopedia: An Insider's Guide to the Subculture of Cool Japan



 

 



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