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You were born in Johannesburg, South Africa, on your website it is detailed that ‘anger and injustice’ drives you in your work as a designer. How does this drive you? – Anger and injustice against you and close loved ones or an issue that affects you and wider public as a whole? Please explain.
I grew up in the township streets of Apartheid South Africa. My background, I guess, plays a big part in the way I think about creativity. Perhaps, what I was exposed to - the unrest, poverty, the sensless violence... it strips away your inclination for self expression, and replaces it with something else. When I was growing up, there used to be military vehicles, an armed military, patroling our township roads. That fucks with your head. I dont' think that it surpressed my need to create. If anything, it made me want to, even more. Something happens to you when you have to fight for freedom. I think it power-charges your emotions and radicalises your vision. I'm wired to a different kind of baggage, a different kind of bullshit. Note that I'm driven by anger...my works not about anger...
What age did you come to the UK? Did you design whilst in Africa and does this still have influences on your design work?
I came to the UK for the first time when I was 26 on a working holiday visa. They were the two best years of my life in London.Till then, I had freelanced as an illiustrator, then as a stylist and writer for The Star newspaper (when I was 21), supplied rave boutiques with plastic dresses and had my first label called Chromosome fitting dresses to women by the age of 26. That time especially will always have an influence on my work. Determination is a bit like respect- you don't just get it...you earn it. Aesthetically, now, I'm a little more grown-up and a little bit more bald.
When and why did you start fashion?
I don't know. I can't recall the first time I picked up a needle. I've always been "stitching" (you should see my blind stitch). My aunts all worked in dress factories, but could never afford the dresses they used to work on. So, they would on a Friday evening buy fabric remnants in downtown Joburg and recreate the dresses to go out dancing in. They could make those dresses in a day. All this would happen with me sitting under the table making dresses for my cousin's dolls with the off-cuts, much to my dad's horror. I think it's where my affair with fashion really began, and where the escapist-like exagerated romantic effect took form that I think my work is about.
How does the UK compare to Johannesburg for creative opportunity?
It doesn't. You can't compare the two. Johannesburg is brown, dirty, edgy, hostile, exciting and grim. Life is plentiful, but cheap. London is grey, nostalgic, lose, perverse, tribal, contradictory, dynamic, prim and vile. People care better for their animals than their old. They are about different romances...different visions. That's what makes it exciting for someone like me to show in London. My look is dangerously at odds with that prim London establishment. They can't stick a label on me, a bit like my race. South Africa struggles with the possibility of the future, while the UK is obsessed with nostalgia. My colonialist background pitched againsts the UK's struggle with globalisation is the honey-pot of my thinking.
At your ‘Pilgrim’ show for Autumn/Winter 2010, you featured a baby, why did you decide to do this? You again showed your open - minded and innovative approach to models, by incorporating a male model with the lower part of his arm missing in your Spring/Summer 2011 presentation. Is this becoming a purposeful statement by you as a designer; to go against the idea of what is ‘normal’ to see in high fashion catwalks/presentations - is it part of the story you are telling, an added social narrative and statement running through the collections?
I dont go against the idea of what is normal. That's a tacky cop-out for being original. I wasn't the first to use a baby or a model born with a congenital birth defect. They're simply accentuate the otherliness of my muse, and sometimes they are lingered with esoteric pepperiness.
‘Eternal Delight’ which is taken from the William Blake plate "Energy is eternal delight. He who desires but acts not breeds pestilence’, is the title of your Spring/ Summer 2011 collection. I thought it was intuitive and clever to capture this ‘energy’ by having the models stand statically, with fans showing movement of the garments against the model’s bodies. It allowed the clothes almost to be viewed mid motion, as if you’d stopped them midway down a catwalk – capturing a special moment and allowing fashion’s blessed to view it close up. Do you agree with this statement?
Have you had any favourite, defining, even life- changing pieces that you have designed?
I've had many, since many of the pieces in the shows, I make the patterns myself. The stand out piece would be a tulle and wool crepe camisole from my SS10 La Fille Sauvage collection. It was intended to be a showpiece only, but ended up being ordered all over the middle east including D'na, the concept store in Riyadh. There isn't a single bone or closure in the piece, yet it fits like a dream, cut on the bias.
Do you admire/ are inspired by any other creatives and why? (Across fashion, interiors, photography, craft ….)
My collections always start with music. Music sets the mood...the tone for my collections. For AW1011 for instance I heard a remix of John Cutler's It's Yours and it instantly evoked temples and ritual...in a house music club! It puntuated the urban-tribal glances in my work. I'm drawn to the work of photographers like Pieter Hugo and musicians like Amon Tobin. And I absolutely love Die Antwoord. I would...they make everything else in art and music seem completely banal.