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Category Archive for Books + Magazines

REVOLUTION IN FASHION 1715-1815: STUNNING ROCOCO COSTUME EXHIBIT PHOTOS.

Kyoto Costume Institute exhibit, Revolution in Fashion, Rococo and Neoclassical clothing and culture.

If you were stranded on a deserted island and could only take one book with you, what would it be? I’ve never been able to make up my mind… but now, I’m quite certain that my answer would be Revolution in Fashion, 1715-1815.

Momoko from Kamikaze Girls would vigorously assent. This book – or rather, Tome of Rococo Inspiration – is a collection of essays and images from a Kyoto museum exhibit. Page after page of Ancien Regime garments are clearly photographed and beautifully displayed. As one reviewer puts it, “it captures the experience of silently moving through the exhibition itself.”

Beautiful Rococo bonnet, ladies in long gowns and petticoats. Marie Antoinette costumes.

Most of these items are from the Kyoto Costume Institute, and they’ve been marvelously preserved. The lady on the left wears a portrait of her Mozart-like lover over her heart.

Rococo masks and corsets, 18th century undergarments. Kyoto museum exhibit of French Revolution fashion.

This display needs no ornament to express the regal elegance of a masked ball. Even the undergarments convey the era’s sumptuousness. (Oops, that’s my reverse manicured thumb in the corner…)

Russian Ark men's court dress, military uniforms from 18th and 19th century. Aristocratic fashion.

I recently saw Russian Ark and was captivated by the male court uniforms. Modern Gothic Aristocrats can find similar jackets from the Japanese brand Atelier Boz.

Rococo satin dresses and corsets. Aristocratic court ladies of 18th and 19th century Versailles, France.

The satin sheen looks like something out of a Joshua Reynolds painting. The Kyoto exhibit opened its doors in 1990; I wonder if it made an impression on proto-Lolitas…

Crazy Rococo hat, sailboat on head, huge powdered wigs and ridiculous gowns. French Revolution court clothing.

That’s… a… sailboat on top of a mile-high powdered wig! And hats loaded with feathers/fruit/flowers, and thirty pounds of floor-sweeping robes. What more can I say about my love for the campy kitschy Rococo? All hail an aesthetic that is cumbersome, frivolous, and mind-whirlingly awesome!

Revolution in Fashion, 1715-1815 (by Jean Starobinski and Phillipe Duboy) is out of print, and used copies start at $150 on Amazon. Never fear – I found the book in the library and took photos of the best images! I’ve posted them in a Flickr set. Pass them along – I hope they’ll inspire you.

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VISUAL KEI DVD VOLUME 2 TO BE RELEASED THIS SUMMER: MANA SAMA INTERVIEW.

Visual Kei DVD volume 1 and 2 with Miyavi, Mana Sama, Malice Mizer, Alice Nine and other J-rock bands.

For those who can’t get enough of J-rockers, Madelaine sent a sweet tip: Maru Music is releasing Visual-Kei DVD Magazine Vol 2 this summer. She writes: “You will not believe who will be in it. He wears blue, has a band, and has a fashion line.” The answer is – you guessed it – Mana of Malice Mizer and Moi dix Mois!

This volume is hosted by an androgyne (Miku, vocalist of Antique Café) and a coked-up, dubiously feline puppet (Biju). As in the first DVD, there will be over an hour of exclusive interviews, live video clips, and behind-the-scene glimpses at the hottest Japanese Visual Kei bands (Smile, chariots, SuG, SaTaN, Himeichigo). There’s even an educational component: a history lesson of the genre and a tour of legendary concert venues such as Rock-May-Kan in Tokyo.

I can’t wait to see the footage of Mana-sama’s side project, Mana’s Not Dead. He talks about his love of punk music and plays drums on a song by The Star Club… while wearing a ripped-up costume made of gauze and hair spiked six inches high. (See photo above left.) Oh Mana, I bow to thee.

The trailer for the DVD gives me butterflies in the stomach! You can pre-order Visual-Kei DVD Magazine Vol 2 from Maru Music’s web store (which also sells Miyavi merchandise, drool.) The DVD is in Japanese with English subtitles, region-free, over an hour in length, and costs $12.

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