Tina Kalivas
Inspiration can be found in the most unusual places. Take, for example, Tina Kalivas’s latest obsession with the tiny alien life forms that live on the ocean floor. Her collection, Bioluminescence, is devoted to such loopy
ideas, although the results are anything but.
To say that Kalivas has an impressive portfolio is an understatement. Having moved from Adelaide to London, aged 19, she first began working for the costume house, Angels & Burmans. Then, after much persistence, she landed the plum role assisting one of London’s most provocative designers, Alexander McQueen. “He has this amazing way of bringing the theatrical world together with high fashion,” she says. “You can’t help but be inspired when you’re around someone like that.” In between McQueen’s shows, Kalivas fulfilled special commissions for the likes of Isabella Blow, and also worked on blockbuster films such as Gangs of New York and Die Another Day.
Now, having settled back in Australia, the designer is contemplating life’s changes. Hence the preoccupation with sci-fi. For her latest collection, Kalivas has taken a predominantly black palette and accentuated it with “spurts of bright acid colours”, three-dimensional
shapes and artful appliqués. Her genius, however, lies in the way her witty concepts combine with impeccable tailoring. “I have evolved a lot over the years,” she says. “But now I feel as though I have my own message. I promised myself I wouldn’t create a line until I found my own voice." Now, here it is, loud and clear.
From Vogue Australia June 2003
Inspiration can be found in the most unusual places. Take, for example, Tina Kalivas’s latest obsession with the tiny alien life forms that live on the ocean floor. Her collection, Bioluminescence, is devoted to such loopy
ideas, although the results are anything but.
To say that Kalivas has an impressive portfolio is an understatement. Having moved from Adelaide to London, aged 19, she first began working for the costume house, Angels & Burmans. Then, after much persistence, she landed the plum role assisting one of London’s most provocative designers, Alexander McQueen. “He has this amazing way of bringing the theatrical world together with high fashion,” she says. “You can’t help but be inspired when you’re around someone like that.” In between McQueen’s shows, Kalivas fulfilled special commissions for the likes of Isabella Blow, and also worked on blockbuster films such as Gangs of New York and Die Another Day.
Now, having settled back in Australia, the designer is contemplating life’s changes. Hence the preoccupation with sci-fi. For her latest collection, Kalivas has taken a predominantly black palette and accentuated it with “spurts of bright acid colours”, three-dimensional
shapes and artful appliqués. Her genius, however, lies in the way her witty concepts combine with impeccable tailoring. “I have evolved a lot over the years,” she says. “But now I feel as though I have my own message. I promised myself I wouldn’t create a line until I found my own voice." Now, here it is, loud and clear.
From Vogue Australia June 2003

