Dirty Looks
Dirty Looks
Scratching beneath fashion’s glossy surface, Dirty Looks: Desire and Decay in
Fashion reveals the rich and varied ways in which fashion has harnessed the
playful, radical, and regenerative potentials of dirt and waste as signifiers of
rebellion, authenticity, and desirability. Various forms of dirt – organic as
well as man-made – have emerged as vital sources of material innovation and
artistic expression in a fashion landscape increasingly shaped by waste, climate
emergency, and labour injustice. From garments that elevate stains and wornness
into ornament, to clothing submerged in bogs or created by transforming fashion
waste, the works presented here challenge established notions of taste, beauty,
and luxury, suggesting new pathways for fashion’s future. This richly
illustrated anthology features new essays by influential voices in contemporary
fashion, including Caroline Evans, Akiko Fukai, Lou Stoppard, and Sara Arnold.
Their writing spans decolonial critique, feminist resistance, fashion’s
environmental cost, and the tension between bodily intimacy and public display.
Alongside these texts, an extensive photographic portfolio by Ellen Sampson
captures iconic garments that embody the project’s themes in sharp, forensic
detail. Featured designers include Vivienne Westwood, Hussein Chalayan, Comme
des Garçons, Issey Miyake, Alexander McQueen, Maison Margiela, and many more.
Dirty Looks offers a timely lens through which to examine fashion’s role in a
world shaped by ecological crisis, cultural reckoning, and shifting aesthetic
values. It invites readers to reconsider the narratives that define what we wear
– and why. Co-published with the Barbican
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