This lecture was focussed on different ways that time can be used in creative ways, along with the use of history, autobiography and biography (personal histories) as well as speed and slowness as a way of reconsidering "making".
Maxine Bristow.
Bristow opposes the industrial speeds of making and focuses on the slow speed of craft, making all of her work by hand, including thousands of button holes which she stitched herself. This to me shows so much skill and creativity, compared to the industrial process of making something which looks so simple like a button hole. These pieces would not contain so much meaning and emotion if they where done by machine as they do knowing Bristow has spend so many hours making them by hand.
Bristow is also fascinated by textiles being part of this anomalous world- this idea of the slowness of craft compared to industrial processes' speed- what if furnishings like the seats we sit on every day where hand woven? Would this slow down the type of lives we lead?
Heritage and tradition in fashion.
Tradition in relation to fashion - timeless pieces? Continuity versus change. Is tradition a living thing? Could it be a way of thinking rather than an actual object? Basis of tradition within fashion - does it go anchor this idea of fashion being constantly changing?
Although the idea of heritage and tradition does make us think that it is going against modern fashion and being much more about continuity- but is it? Although garments being made by companies such as Pringle which is all about this heritage and traditional pieces, if we where to compare the garments being made right now to ones back when the company first opened- they would probably be very different, so is it really going against this basis of fashion being future forward?
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