Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake
Transcription
Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake
Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake Chikako Hiramitsu [email protected] Osaka University Graduate School of Letters Issey Miyake, a Japanese fashion designer, sets much value on bringing a contemporary interpretation of traditional Japanese wear, the kimono, to western clothing. Stressing the decoration of the fabrics and creating clothes in harmony with the feel of them, as well as designing clothes that resonate physically and spiritually with the wearer, these characteristic elements of his designs are inspired by the kimono. From the point of Orientalism, however, his view of Japanese traditions is unique to modern Japanese people who have been westernised and mimic the West. He can never be free from being typified as a 'Japanese designer,’ so the fact that he is Japanese creates the duality of being distinguished from the West while mimicking it. His final aim to create clothes that are universal achieved in his series of collections with pleats, can also be seen from the point of such a concept. This study will clarify how he introduced the kimono into western clothing and his position in the fashion industry. Keywords: Issey Miyake, fashion design, Japan, tradition designs in which ‘the East meets the West’ can be clarified. Introduction 'East Meets West' Issey Miyake entitled his first book of works ‘East Meets West.’ The title was quoted from the poem 1. The East and the West in Miyake ‘The Ballad of East and West’ written by Rudyard Kipling, one of the colonialists. In the poem, Haute couture as western clothing Kipling stated that the East doesn't meet the West. But they do meet in the works of Miyake. The After graduating from an art college in Japan, modern fashion industry has spread across the Miyake studied at Ecole de la chambre sandica in boundaries of countries and nations, mainly in a Paris for a year, and then worked as an assistant for few big cities in developed countries. Issey Miyake two years in the ateliers of Guy Laroche and has received recognition for bringing a modern Givenchy. From these experiences, Miyake got the interpretation of the Japanese kimono to western idea that haute couture typified western clothing. clothing, in the fashion industry. This study sheds light on the way that the kimono is interpreted and In his mind, haute couture dresses are solid assimilated in Miyake's works with reference to his structural packages, symbolising overdecorative perspective on western, and eastern or Japanese and heavy western culture. Such western dresses clothes. Then, his method of producing universal stress body Design Discourse vol.1 no.1 2005 January shape through skilled tailoring 35 Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake Hiramitsu techniques. Miyake questioned this notion of preserved and handed down over generations. western dresses, doubting not only the forms of the ࠘fig.2࠙ He also sometimes creates new fabrics in clothes but also their relationship with the wearers. co-operation with the artisans in these districts. To Miyake, making haute couture dresses is ࠘fig.3࠙ The textile designer, Makiko Minagawa, comparable to serving the bourgeoisie and in has been one of his partners from the very complete opposition to his sensibilities. Haute beginning. She comes from a family of dyers and couture is intended for high and middle classes, weavers that have lived in Kyoto for several based on the strict distinctions of sex, class, generations. occasion, or purpose. From the 1950s to the ‘60s, developed or improved the variety of traditional haute couture extended its sphere of influence Japanese materials ranging from simple striped through fashion fabrics to some unique materials such as Japanese magazines or movies, but at the end of the ‘60s paper or basyoufu; a fabric made from leaves. Jack some signs of decline began to appear. Miyake Larsen pointed out their Japanese characteristics in sympathised with this change in the minds of the techniques, such as shibori3 or nishiki4, and in western people, on the point of general doubts over the colours without vividness or strong contrasts, the trickle-down system in fashion at that time. He and their modern characteristics in using new found western culture, as well as western clothes, fabrics, in the technical textile finishing for lustre to be incompatible with other clothing. His or stretch, as well as in their actual cost of experiences in haute couture in Paris raised within productions.5 The designs are then completed by him the question, ‘Why should the standard be in letting air into the chinks between the body and the Europe?’ and from this, he started to release his garment. Miyake refers to this air as 'Ma.' 6 On clothes from the western definition and began to account of the Ma, the body shape in the garment create his own. can't be seen in the outer appearance. It is not until expanding media such as Miyake and Minagawa have the garment changes its expression through motion that the inner body can be recognised. Miyake considers Japanese culture to be rather spiritual ‘A piece of cloth’ and the physical senses restrained, characteristics that can also be seen in Nou costumes. He regards The Japanese kimono was the starting point of Nou costumes as allowing the players to express Miyake’s search for his own definition. He designs their spirituality by wrapping their bodies in an a garment from within where the human body oriental way. In olden times, Japanese people touches the fabric, as opposed to the western trend usually adopted such attitudes, making and their of designing from outside the body. In the minds and bodies relax in the same way when they beginning, he chooses a fabric and checks the way put on kimonos. From the kimono, Miyake got the it feels against his own body. He has said that he idea of enhancing the decorations of the fabrics closes his eyes and allows the fabrics to tell him and making the garments resonate with the human what to do with them. Then, designs can be created body. that maintain the superiority of the decorations during dyeing and weaving of the kimono which has few varieties of forms. Miyake visits many fabric producing districts in Japan, where fabrics such as shijira1࠘fig.1࠙ and tsumugi2 have been Design Discourse vol.1 no.1 2005 January 36 Hiramitsu Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake figure1 .Jacket, Aprondress, Skirt 1976 Cotton Awa shijira . Shijira is the Japanese traditional fabric like sucker. figure 2. Coat dressỞ 1976 The fabric is inspired by Tanzen, the Japanese traditional He first became interested in Japanese dyeing and fabric in the triple cloth with fancy check. But the light weaving in his student days and after coming back color are not from Tanzen. from New York, his focus of interest was Japanese workers, such as Tobi7, Kurumahiki8 or peasants. This interest has prevailed right throughout his work. According to Miyake, there are some fixed ideas in the fashion industry that the West is more beautiful than the East, or that fashion means dressing up. He set out to break these taboos and discover the beauty of Japanese people. At first, he found beauty in the women who worked in the country and in an old activist in the women's movement. Not only were these women Japanese but also they were old, so they did not fit the fashion standard mould of beauty. They lived the unchangeable reality of their lives through labour or ideology. figure 3. Bistier'Rattan Body'Ở 1982 Made of rattan and vinyl. It was made in cooperation with a workman of the tools for the Japanese tea ceremony. Design Discourse vol.1 no.1 2005 January 37 Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake Hiramitsu From Japan to the Orient Miyake’s first theme of creation was formed under the concept of introducing some elements of the kimono into western clothing. This theme also questioned the origins of clothes. In Miyake's interpretation of clothes, the idea that the West is opposite to Japan, the orient, or the non-West can be seen. The theme ‘a piece of cloth’ ࠘fig.4࠙is not in opposition to the West, but the search for universal clothing reveals that it has some elements of both sides. This means that every nation has its original clothing culture from the very beginning, or that a garment can be made from only a piece of cloth. Starting with the kimono, he then extended his figure 4. A piece of cloth Ở 1977 Ở interest to other oriental cultures. He attended the Nitting goun ‘Fashion Live Theatre’ event as a director, held in Kobe in 1981, and suggested sending some designers to Guatemala, Bali, India and Tibet to The universal clothing study the four points of the origin of clothes. The selected designers then went to these areas, Miyake worked as an assistant in Gefftey Beene discovered being for a year in New York after the May revolution in conducted there and finally designed clothes Paris. He got the idea of universal clothing through adapted for mass production. In another case in the influence of American culture that he 1984, he set out to revive traditional Indian fabrics experienced at that time. He was fascinated by the in contemporary clothing. This work bore fruit as power of the young in American culture that was the fashion brand ‘ASHA’ and in two exhibitions, wielded by the hippie movement or pop culture at ‘Les Textiles de l'Inde et les Modeles Crees par the end of the 1960s. He looked on the T-shirts and Issey Miyake’ at Musee des Arts Decoratifs Paris jeans as symbols of the liberty and freedom that and ‘HASTH - Indian hand-weaving with Miyake’ transcended all boundaries of race, sex or class, in Tokyo. In the exhibition’s catalogue, ‘Inventive and set his sights on clothes that everyone could Clothes’ in 1974, he insisted that this inane wear in their daily lives. It was also from such a tendency to stick to Japanese tradition or cultural perspective that he began to notice Japanese localities had to be abandoned, and that nothing working wear just after he returned to his native more could be gained from making distinctions Japan. traditional practices still such as Japanese, American and European. 9 This idea of universal clothing that has been the basis of his work was put into practice to some extent in ‘Pleats Please’ ࠘fig.5࠙in 1993. In this collection of pleats, permanent pleating was Design Discourse vol.1 no.1 2005 January 38 Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake Hiramitsu processed with heat after sawing, owing to his pleats were sourced from traditional Japanese technological innovations in chemical fibers. It techniques. was praised for presenting the possibility of clothes as a field of industrial design and for exploding established manufacturing processes. Pleated clothes maintain their original forms even when 2. Miyake in the fashion industry they are washed or folded. Their very simple designs are basically unchangeable though some The ‘Japanese designers’ new colors or patterns are added each season. It is not too much to say that ‘Pleats Please’ is a Miyake has had one bone of contention since completed version of his universal clothing. working in Paris. It is that he is always asked to incorporate some Japanese elements into his designs just because he is Japanese. By the time he presented his first collection in the 1970s, Hanae Mori had already established her position and Kenzo Takada had begun to be noticed in Paris. Mori's designs were quoted from traditional Japanese patterns and fabrics, such as the graceful floral motives or the luxurious fabrics used for Obis. In a sense she embodied the past Japanism, while Miyake and Takada were accepted as the new popular Japanesque. Certainly Miyake and Takada had some points in common, and were put together under the label of ‘Japanese designers.’ It is said that their loose-fitting forms and layered garments still have an effect on western clothing today. 10 Early in the 1980s, when Rei Kawakubo and Yhoji Yamamoto joined them, their first collections gave rise to much controversy in the figure5. Pleats Please 1996 fashion magazines and newspapers. The Made of polyester jersey. imperfection, the de-constructiveness and the achromatic colours on their designs were regarded There have been different pleating techniques used as some spiritual Japanesque elements related to in his work prior to this. In the 1970s, in the the aesthetics of Zen. Their style was termed ‘oniyoryu’ collection, he made lengthwise irregular ‘Japan Shock’ and accepted as a deviation from ripples on fabric, to which the traditional Japanese proper western dress-theory or an invasion of the technique of ‘shibori’ had been applied. In the boundary to the west. 11 Then, Miyake was put 1980s, he made hand-processed pleats in polyester together with them under the banner of the next fabric and combined them with Japanese paper. ‘Japanese Based on such details, including the repeated progressive and experimental elements have been experiments he conducted for five years before required of ‘Japanese designers’ since then. Under ‘Pleats Please’ was presented, it is supposed that the heading of ‘Japanese designers,’ their values Design Discourse vol.1 no.1 2005 January designers.’ Some avant-garde, 39 Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake Hiramitsu are approved in their designs on the one hand, but The word Orientalism generally means a their personalities are neglected and confined movement in European literature and painting with within the limits of the ‘Japanese’ on the other. some romantic exoticism, or studies about the languages, arts, etc of oriental countries. But in Said, Orientalism is described as ‘a style of thought made between the Orient and the From the point of Orientalism Occident’ or ‘a western style of domination over the Orient.’14 In this concept, for the Occident, the Such a view of Japanese designers cannot be Orient is a place completely different from it and a understood without considering the historical symbol of obscurity, oppositeness and distance. At courses of the West and Japan. In western clothing the heart of this, is the fundamental difference history, it wasn’t until the end of the 19th century presumed to exist between the Orient and the that the Japanese influences appeared. Some Occident, and the Orient is typified as a peculiar influences of the kimono and other national idea. The Occident views the Orient as needing to clothing in oriental countries can be found clearly be represented, taught, interpreted and redeemed in the works of designers such as Paul Poret, Janne from its deplorable position, and revived to Paquin or Madeleine Vionnet at the start of haute modernity. couture. 12 It is considered to be part of the exoticism, called Japanism, that spread in the 19th The biased perspective of Miyake as a ‘Japanese century. The straight construction and the ease designer’ can be reduced from the point of this found in oriental native dresses were adapted to concept of Orientalism. According to Richard western dresses under the pressure to release Martin and Harold Coda, Japan, as required by the women from corsets. And the motives or West, had been an object of exoticism symbolized techniques used in traditional Japanese textiles in kabuki, ukiyoe and samurai till the 1970s, and were applied to European textiles. However, this changed to an object that gave secular boisterous extension of the dresses under the influence of western culture some spiritual serenity in the latter Japanism was only for the middle and high classes, half of the 1990s. 15 Though they have a high and only for a few items such as dresses or gowns. opinion of Japanese designers, this opinion is filled with the typical idea and the Orientalism concept At the same time, Japanese people gradually began that Japan serves the West. In fact, many Japanese to dress in western clothing. Kipling, as mentioned designers above, visited Japan twice at the end of the 19th Yamamoto have presented their collections in century when he was a journalist. In his records at Paris and in other cities all over the world. But that time, he asked why Japanese people wore designers who don’t come under the banner of western clothes that were unsuitable to their typical Japanese designers or agree with them are physiques instead of the kimono, he thought that removed, and only a few are approved as designers Japanese people would soon recognize this and who can bring useful or novel stimuli to western eventually stop wearing western clothes. 13 Though except Miyake, Kawakubo and fashion. the West didn't meet the East in Kipling, in the modern fashion industry the situation is such that In Said, the structure of Orientalism is not merely the West alone does not keep Japanese culture the binary opposition of the West and the East. In under its control. this style of thought, the Orient differs from the Design Discourse vol.1 no.1 2005 January 40 Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake Hiramitsu West or contradicts it, and should be taken onto the different from itself, in addition to mimicking its western side. Miyake set out to become a fashion culture and introducing its values. In the modern designer influenced by fashion magazines such as fashion industry, Miyake has kept the binal parts of ‘American Vogue’ or ‘Harper’s Bazaar’ in his mimicking the West and of being apart from the boyhood. After the last war, people in Japan West while, at the same time, being a ‘Japanese rushed to wear western clothes with the progress of designer.’ westernization and Americanization. On the other hand, Japanese culture embodied in the kimono rapidly declined. Therefore, when Miyake began to notice Japanese traditions just after he came back Conclusion to Japan, it was not a rediscovery inside him but a new discovery from a fresh perspective. In the At the end of the 19th century, the western mode same way as the West, he discovered the had become superior to most national costumes all traditional cultures of Japan or other oriental over the world under the government of the countries, gave them redemption and revived them imperialists. In practical terms, the West also lost in contemporary fashion. its own clothing aesthetics at the same time. Especially, some traditional decoration techniques He presented his collection under the title of ‘Body of western clothes barely survived the adjustment Works’ in which he dealt with various materials to industrial production. Bruno du Roselle pointed besides fabric such as iron, paper and bamboo. out that western clothing, since World WarϨ, ‘has Some of these works show Japanism that is been one of the most desolate and least brilliant different from previous works. In particular, the modes, furthermore the least imaginative and one named ‘Rattan Body’ looks like a samurai creative modes.’ 16 The worldwide unification of costume with a pleated skirt. Including this in a the clothing mode has created the various desires few more and necessities for the self-expression of the Japanesque impressions than all the other works of wearers. In the recent fashion industry, the Miyake put together. In those days, he tried to products, the capital and the talent have been build up his position by playing voluntarily his reorganized on a world scale, and the new markets ‘Japanese’ role, while doubting the prejudice of the are eagerly being cultivated in response to ‘Japanese designers.’ His works on oriental international economies. The creativity of the countries except Japan can be explained by such designers cannot lead the uniformed mode in one style in Orientalism. Western Orientalism was direction by itself. Although depending on the fully imported to Japan and still exists in the individual creations of the designers is originally a present day. For all the refutations and criticisms very western way, special to haute couture, it is of Orientalism, it is supposed that it has infiltrated regarded as a dressmaking laboratory and just throughout most Japanese people and is commonly manages to survive with the selling of licensed held as a style of thought. Miyake mimicked the contracts. pieces in ‘Body Works’ made West in trying to create universal clothing. Above this, the contradiction that Miyake has taken can be Miyake said that if there were something left for restored to its original structure consisting of the the designer to do as a creator, it would be to rule and the ruled, the West and the East. The West incorporate poesy, and that the creators of the next as the rule requires the East to continue to be generation had to have sufficient imagination to Design Discourse vol.1 no.1 2005 January 41 Japanese Tradition in Isssey Miyake Hiramitsu control the technology. When Miyake aimed at universal clothing such as T-shirts and jeans, he aimed to present a little imagination to individuals of the masses, while recognizing the fact that the mode is rather unified had taken root. It is supposed that he has been trying to confront, not 12 Fukai, Akiko. (1994), Japonism in Fashion, Tokyo: Heibonsha 13 Kipling, Rudyard .(1908), From Sea to Sea vol.1 p349, Tokyo: Macmillan 14 the invention or the ideal, but the reality in his Said, Edward .W (1985), Orientalism, Tokyo: Penguin Books fight for traditional Japanese fabrics. 15 Endnotes Martin, Richard. Coda, Harold. (1996), The Contemporary Fashion and Japonism, tr. Uegaito, Kenichi "Japonism in Fashion," pp. 28-31, Tokyo 16 1 Japanese fabric woven out of high twist yarns with fine crinkles on the surface. du Roselle, Bruno. (1995), LA MODE, tr. Nishimura, Aiko. Tokyo: Heibonsha 2 Japanese hand-woven fabric made from yarns of uneven thickness, manually spun from silk. 3 A method of resist dyeing in which the required design is securely tied or stitched onto the fabric before dyeing. 4 A weaving method with supplementary weft patterns in thick, glossy silk or gold or silver thread, appearing much like embroidery. 5 Larsen, Jack. (1988) Fabric designs on Makiko Minagawa, Makiko Minagawa "TEXTURE," Tokyo: Kodansha 6 A term widely used in Japanese traditional arts to designate an artistically placed interval in time or space. 7 A steeplejack. 8 A worker who pulls a rickshaw . 9 Bibliography Miyake, Issey. 1978, ISSEY MIYAKE East Meets West, Tokyo:Heibonsya Miyake,Issey.1983,Issey Miyake Bodyworks, Tokyo:Shogakkan Miyake,Issey.1985 Issey Miyake& Miyake Design Studio1970-1985,Tokyo:Obunsha Miyake,Issey. 1999, Making Things ,Tokyo:AXIS Holborn,Mark. 1995,Issey Miyake, colobne: Benedikt Taschen veriag GmbH Benaim ,Laurence. 1996,Issey Miyake:Kodansha Press Kondo,Drinne. 1997" Orientalising Fashion Japan" in About Face:Routledge Miyake, Issey. (1975), Staring at the Evidences of Time, Fukai,Akiko. 1999, Japonisme in Fashion, Tokyo,:Heibonsya "Inventive Clothes 1909-1939," 1978,MA:Espace-Temps du Japon,Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Paris p.79, Tokyo 10 Fukai, Akiko. 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