Vivienne Westwood
Original and outrageous, British designer Vivienne Westwood is one of
the most recognised and influential designers of the late twentieth
century.
By her mid twenties, Vivienne Westwood’s life seemed to be passing in
a distinctly unremarkable way. At 25, she was married to an air
steward, she lived in Willesden, went to church and taught in a local
primary school. Then something remarkable happened - she met Malcolm
Mclaren – future manager of The Sex
Pistols, and he led her into the
underground of the late 1960s street. He lectured her on the
political power of art and liberated her creative desires from their
bondage in working class conformity. Westwood became a subversive
seamstress of pop.
Her first designs hung in Let it Rock on the King’s Road in
1971. Five years later the boutique, now named Sex, sold ripped
T-shirts, chains and assorted bondage gear and Westwood was dressing
Johnny Rotten and The Sex Pistols.
The punk storm drove Westwood before it, putting her at the forefront
of street culture but, as the drugs wore off and the hangover kicked
in, Westwood was left thinking "what next?"
Pirates were the answer. The early 1980s was the time of the New
Romantics, an urban arts scene that eschewed gender distinctive dress
to delight in the theatre of courtier costume and whirls of eyeliner.
Catching their mood, Westwood looked back to the 19th Century for her
first collection, which she called Pirates.
With Pirates, Westwood’s success was secured. She showed in
Paris in 1983 and never looked back. In the 1990s, her interest
shifted into haute couture and she has made extensive use of British
wools, tartans, tweeds and linens. She has twice been named British
designer of the year and was awarded an OBE. |
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