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Old 18-09-2007   #31
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T-shirt, 1975–77. White cotton with red, blue, and black silkscreen print.

This version of what is known as the "Cambridge Rapist" T-shirt lacks the text and may have been a concession to the controversy that the original version elicited. Depicting the masked image against a distressed English flag is an overt representation of punk's anti-establishment message.


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Old 18-09-2007   #32
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"Bondage" suit, 1976. Black cotton with metal fittings. The "Bondage" suit epitomized the maverick creative collaboration between Westwood and McLaren. McLaren brought some standard-issue cotton army trousers back from a trip to the United States, which Vivienne then copied in a shiny black sateen McLaren had seen on the back of British rail clerks' waistcoats and sourced in Manchester. McLaren added the bondage straps between the knees, which were an extension of the sado-masochistic look they promoted at the time for its shock value. Pushing this traumatic aesthetic to its obvious conclusion creates the feel of a straightjacket and plays with all of the implications of the insane. Ultimately, they had created one of the most iconic garments of punk style, one that is still in production to this day.


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Old 18-09-2007   #33
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1996. Cream cotton shirt printed in mid blue with pointed turn-down collar and fastening cf with seven yellow plastic buttons; long sleeves with matching oval buttons; curved hem; inverted box pleat cb from yoke. Printed in blue with large scale "Toiles de Jouy" designs showing French domestic scenes.


manchestergalleries.org
 
Old 18-09-2007   #34
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1994. Jacket : "Worthmore" black mohair/wool mix woven with a white flecked parallel stripe. Complex construction, with fronts dipping to points either side cf. Wide turned down collar; very wide separate revers; front opening, fastening diagonally to the left with 3 enamelled buttons (showing the orb and ring motif). Long sleeves without cuffs, but with deep faced slit on the inner seam. CB seam with deep inverted box pleat; side seams from under shoulder curving round side to point at fronts and then moving diagonally up to meet CF at the base of the revers. Each back panel cut as one piece with front skirt panels. Side pockets on the hips, tacked closed. Fronts faced with self fabric; upper bodice and sides lined with pink acetate.


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Old 18-09-2007   #35
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1998. Mustard yellow evening outfit, comprising hipster jacket in velvet and long trained skirt, bias cut in velvet and satin. SB jacket with large fuax horn orb button cf; patch pockets with v-shaped turn-down flaps; huge rounded revers; lined pale pink acetate; skirt with zigzag front panel in matching velvet, cut on the cross, and back in satin; woven labels "Vivienne Westwood, gold label, 14" Paper label in jacket with cost £525.


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Old 18-09-2007   #36
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1990 - 2000. 3-piece hotpants suit in fuschia pink silk satin and wool twill, comprising a long double breasted jacket in wool with stepped lapels and buttons faced in satin, a duchess satin "Ingres" waistcoat and matching satin hotpants, all labelled, and lined with "Mai West" hair print.
3-piece hotpants suit in fuschia pink silk satin and wool twill, comprising a long double breasted jacket in wool with stepped lapels and buttons faced in satin, a duchess satin "Ingres" waistcoat and matching satin hotpants, all labelled, and lined with "Mai West" hair print. All size 12



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Old 18-09-2007   #37
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A portion of "A Short Sharp Shock", a documentary on Punk and the Sex Pistols.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=sxTuwBgYqug
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Old 18-09-2007   #38
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1993. 1993. Nylon lace, organdy, tulles.


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Old 18-09-2007   #39
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Oops. This is the back of #25. c. 1982 / 83. "Buffalo Girls" dress with train, machine-knitted wool; hat, wool felt, and ‘baggy’ shoes, suede.

Dress with train, machine-knitted wool; hat, wool felt, and ‘baggy’ shoes, suede



liverpoolmuseums.org.uk
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Old 18-09-2007   #40
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Vivienne Westwood is both iconoclast and global icon. In the 1970s, she electrified the world with the launch of Punk fashion and went on to become one of the most inventive and influential designers of our time. Fashion to her became "a baby I picked up and never put down."

This exhibition, which was organized by the Victoria and Albert Museum, London and which makes the de Young its only U.S. stop on an international tour, celebrates Westwood’s extraordinary, nearly 40-year-long career. Known best for her fearless nonconformity, she also has a profound respect for the past and looks to it for inspiration. With tradition as her springboard, she takes historic garments such as corsets and crinolines and reinvents them in new ways or uses thoroughly British fabrics like tartans and tweeds to create fashion that gently parodies Establishment styles. However outrageous or provocative the result, her approach has always been practical. She is driven by a curiosity about how things work, and her work reflects her systematic exploration of the structure of historical costume in museum collections.

Westwood's extraordinary range and inventiveness is showcased in the more than 150 objects that make up the exhibition, all drawn from her personal archive and the V&A's collection. The work spans the extremes of fashion, from London street style to the catwalks of Paris and London, and reveals Westwood’s own evolution from subversive shop owner to one of fashion’s most respected figures.
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Spring/Summer 1991 Cut and Slash collection. Photograph by Marc Hispard, From Elle Brazil, July 1991, p. 104.


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Old 18-09-2007   #41
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Harlequin, from the Vivienne Westwood Voyage to Cythera collection, Autumn/Winter 1989–90. Photograph by Cindy Palmano.


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Debby in Jubilee Outfit, from 1977 Seditionaries in "430 King’s Road". Photographer unknown.


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Old 18-09-2007   #42
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Sara Stockbridge wearing Harris Tweed Crown, from the Vivienne Westwood Harris Tweed collection, 1987. Photograph by Nick Knight.


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Mini-Crini, from the Vivienne Westwood Spring/Summer 1985 Mini-Crini collection. Photograph by Stephen Meisel. From Italian Vogue, supp. No. 430, January 1986, p. 161.


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Old 18-09-2007   #43
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Metropolitan suit, from the Vivienne Westwood Vive La Cocotte Autumn/Winter 1995–6 collection. V&A, London.




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Old 18-09-2007   #44
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"Naomi Shoes," from the Vivienne Westwood Anglomania Autumn/Winter 1993–4 collection. V&A, London.


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Fig Leaf Tights, from the Vivienne Westwood Voyage to Cythera collection, Autumn/Winter 1989–90. V&A, London.


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Old 18-09-2007   #45
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Suit, from the Vivienne Westwood Pagan I Spring/Summer 1988 collection. V&A, London.


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Liberty Knit Dress, from the Vivienne Westwood On Liberty collection Autumn/Winter 1994–5. V&A, London.


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