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No. 7 Character
TALKING TEXTILES is a trend magazine, published once yearly, filled with work by global graduates from international design institutions; for the textile industry, looking at how fashion design starts to focus on fabric, how interior design brings back upholstery and how art students reach out to the loom.
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TALKING TEXTILE ISSUE #7  

Talking Textiles CREATING CHARACTER

By Li Edelkoort

As if to counteract a loss of passion for dressing up and indulging in textiles, the creative community is working hard at keeping the memory alive with extraordinary characters created from scratch, waste and shreds. Dressed by contemporary fibre artists and textile designers, these characters are extremely expressive and use a maximum amount of material, making them endearing and frightening at the same time, as much doll as devil in disguise. They run the gamut from primitive shaman to independent robot and all the variants in between, such as the carnivalesque opportunist, the recycled activist and the outsider artist. Shamanism has persisted all over the world since its inception in ancient native cultures and is now a source of inspiration for constructing the wildest of clothes. Young graduates have especially taken to the task of divining identity and have used the pandemic years as a pause to understand their innate needs for expression. The results are daring ideas of hide and seek that lay bare the soul as much as the body. Performance art, dance and video are often part of their world. It is clear that their need to become the other is crucial to our times and expresses a deep-rooted sense of intuition that has been forgotten for ages. And now makes for an incredible inroad to shake up society.

Published: November, 2022

TALKING TEXTILE ISSUE #7  

Talking Textiles CREATING CHARACTER

By Li Edelkoort

As if to counteract a loss of passion for dressing up and indulging in textiles, the creative community is working hard at keeping the memory alive with extraordinary characters created from scratch, waste and shreds. Dressed by contemporary fibre artists and textile designers, these characters are extremely expressive and use a maximum amount of material, making them endearing and frightening at the same time, as much doll as devil in disguise. They run the gamut from primitive shaman to independent robot and all the variants in between, such as the carnivalesque opportunist, the recycled activist and the outsider artist. Shamanism has persisted all over the world since its inception in ancient native cultures and is now a source of inspiration for constructing the wildest of clothes. Young graduates have especially taken to the task of divining identity and have used the pandemic years as a pause to understand their innate needs for expression. The results are daring ideas of hide and seek that lay bare the soul as much as the body. Performance art, dance and video are often part of their world. It is clear that their need to become the other is crucial to our times and expresses a deep-rooted sense of intuition that has been forgotten for ages. And now makes for an incredible inroad to shake up society.

Published: November, 2022

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