Street Furniture Competition 2011
THE PROBLEM:
"Interiors are a set of anachronisms; a museum, with the lingering residues of decorative styles that an inhabited space collects."
-Richard Hamilton
Hamilton was an english painter and collage artist whose projects are revered as some of the earliest works of Pop Art. His work is signified by the treatment of the classical and historical in conjunction with the contemporary. He saw interiors not as simply existing, but a sort of hodgepodge of space and time. He chose to explore the realm of architecture not through 3-D represenations but through a diversity of artistic languages, which he believed was the only way to analyze the theme of interior space. Hamilton utilized the mixture of stylized cartoon, relief sculpture photograph, paint, and screen print to create images that are both "taudry yet extraodinarily sophisticated." The collages are a spatial representations of the desires, values, expectations and consumerist attitudes throughout the late 1950's and 1960's. Hamilton focused on the conglomeration of objects from different temporal occurences and their assertions in one space. They are about the relationship between the object and the room.
 
The fashion world and the built world are two disciplines that are on seemingly different ends of the spectrum. However, their very foundations are becoming more and more intertwined.
Both fashion and architecture were devised out of a human imperative for the sheltering and protection of the body from outside sources. They were designed for human necessity. As structures and clothing became more ingrained in the social psyche, they each became a means of outward expression of identity. The home and the outfit are seen as an opportunity for an assertion of the person and personality within.
Architects and fashion designers have been experimenting with the same processes in the creation of their works. Designers such as the late Alexander McQueen (whose work is currently on exhibit at the MET) have been building structure within their clothing to give the appearance of shape and volume on the body. Structural form is the way in which many architects devise spaces for the body, such as Shigeru Ban. Many architects have experimented with the folding and draping in early stages of formal analysis, just as Fashion Designers work with initial iterations of garments. On top of these traditional means of design, many fashion designers are using 3D-modeling programs that were primarily designed to aid in architectural practices. One such designer is Elena Manferdini. These two design disciplines are interrelated at their very basis, they are designs for the body in space.
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Vidal Sassoon has been deemed an artist, a craftsman, and a rock star. He marched on the battlefield of hairstyling, scissors in hand, and became a liberator of women against the oppressive tyranny of the 1950's salon.
In the recent documentary chronicling Sassoon's life, he named Bauhaus architecture as a main inspiring force throughout the course of his distinguished career. As both the typology and topology of architecture was rapidly changing with the emergence of the Bauhaus and the Modernist dictum, Sassoon sought this same transformation in hair-styling. Where hair was not about tight curls, or harsh routines but more about the 'wash and wear' functionality to fit the ever changing livelihood of the Modern (with a capital M) woman. The belief that hair was not simply about beauty, but more about geometry, angles, and structure unique to the head to which it sat upon, is the true essence that brought Sassoon's correlation between architecture and hairstyling to life. Bauhaus architects sought to revolutionize buildings and infrastructure through a pedestaling of function and program as a means of generating geometric form specific to site. Sassoon's pioneering styles were straight, short and cut into uneven shapes to express the individual bone structure. The revolution occurring in the built world was both paralleled and strengthened by what Sassoon created in not only hair-styling but life-styling.