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Embroidered silks to Adidas collabs: the evolution of the kimono

Embroidered silks to Adidas collabs: the evolution of the kimono

The Guardian04-06-2025
NGV senior curator Wayne Crothers says that up until the 20th century the term kimono was used generically to describe all clothing – the garments we now know as kimonos were simply 'what everyone wore'. He says: 'Historically they didn't use the word kimono. They used all of these huge vocabulary of words to describe different styles.' Photograph: Mitch Fong/National Gallery of Victoria
Made for an aristocratic woman during the Edo period, circa 1800, this silk garment was designed to be worn open, with the padded hem trailing behind. It depicts a falconry scene – a common hobby for wealthy people at that time. 'An imperial lord or a princess would ride in that cart at the bottom,' Crothers says. 'This is very much for samurai-class women.' At the time the kimono was made, Japan had closed its borders to the wider world but inside the country it was a time of relative peace and prosperity, at least for the upper classes. Photograph: National Gallery of Victoria
Outer layer garments during this period were often 'gorgeously, embroidered and decorated', Crothers says. First, a kimono would be coloured through resist-dye techniques, then more colour and detail was added through embroidery. Photograph: Mitch Fong/NGV
Crothers says this garment is at the 'completely other end of the scale … a kimono made out of necessity from fragments or scraps of fabric'. While people think of Japan as wealthy, this garment from the Meiji period (1868-1912) shows 'there were people that didn't have very much finance, they toiled very hard as labourers or farmers'. Called a boro (rag) kimono, scraps were quilted on top of each other until it was thick enough to provide warmth in winter. This technique shows 'the more love that you imbue into an object, the more beautiful it becomes'. Photograph: National Gallery of Victoria
During the Meiji period, from 1868 onwards, Japan reopened its borders to the world and Japanese design became a global obsession. During the late 19th century, it was very fashionable for aristocratic western women to sit for portraits in Japanese garments. This artwork by Australian impressionist John Longstaff was painted shortly after he arrived in Paris in 1890. Photograph: John Longstaff/NGV
Department store Liberty, in London, were 'very early adopters of importing the export kimono from Japan and then also adapting the silhouette for western tastes', says Charlotte Botica, curator of fashion and textiles at NGV. This gown, made in-house by Liberty in 1910, features western flowers depicted in a Japanese style, with a classic kimono shape adapted into a western evening robe. Photograph: National Gallery of Victoria
This poster showcases the visual exchange that happened between Japan and the west from the late 19th century onward. Hisui Sugiura was Japan's first superstar graphic designer. This poster is an advertisement he made for the department store Mitsukoshi. Sugiura had recently returned from Paris when he created the work in 1914 and was inspired by art nouveau style. That style had in turn been heavily influenced by traditional Japanese aesthetics. Illustration: Hisui Sugiura/National Gallery of Victoria
Made in 1930, this is the kimono equivalent of novelty boxers. Men's outer robes tended to be dark and sober but their inner robes (nagajuban) were a chance for self-expression. It features illustrations of planes, ships and automobiles. During this era, for the first time, young men and women 'earned their own income and they could buy the things that they wanted … rather than being dependent on their parents', Crothers says. It is one of many garments in the exhibition 'that reveal the interests of the 'modern girls' and the 'modern boys' of the 1930s … moga and mobo was the abbreviated term in Japan at the time'. Photograph: National Gallery of Victoria
Made in 1961, this is a museum piece from renowned artisan Serizawa Keisuke. 'Rather than just dyeing a flat piece of fabric or textile, he's using the kimono format as a canvas to create his works,' Crothers says. It is dyed using an Okinawan technique involving banana leaf fibre and stencils. This motif is 'inspired by glaze dribbling down the side of a jar'. Photograph: National Gallery of Victoria
Tamao Shigemune is one of the leading Harajuku street style designers working today. During the 20th century, kimonos were seen as impractical for a long period but, from the 1990s on, the style has re-emerged among young, fashionable people. Tamao uses polyester and digital printing techniques to make more affordable kimono. Photograph: Tamao Shigemune/Katomi/National Gallery of Victoria
Rumi Rock is another leading contemporary street style designer. This kimono, which features long sleeves traditionally worn by young women, was made for a coming of age ceremony. It is paired with a modern take on geta, a double 'toothed' traditional platform sandal. Composite: Rumi Rock/Akihisa Okumoto/National Gallery of Victoria
Alexander McQueen's spring/summer 2008 runway show was inspired by Isabella Blow but this garment also features many traditional Japanese elements, such as long trailing sleeves and a butterfly motif. The belt is a hybridisation of a corset and a traditional Japanese obi. 'The butterfly is the personification of the soul in Japanese culture,' Botica says. Photograph: Michel Dufour/WireImage
Hiroko Takahashi is a star of contemporary Japanese design, collaborating with brands such as Adidas and creating garments for sumo wrestlers. She is 'a very savvy, creative but extremely approachable designer', Crothers says. In this self-portrait, as in many of her works, she has chosen to pose in a fighter's stance. 'Which is not the traditional demure, feminine style pose,' he says. The NGV's exhibition features many works by Hiroko, including one custom-made for the exhibition, modelled on a life-sized statue of the designer.
Illustration: Hiroko Takahashi/National Gallery of Victoria
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Meet the Wiltshire tennis coach leading a team to the Deaflympics
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Meet the Wiltshire tennis coach leading a team to the Deaflympics

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The Sun

time40 minutes ago

  • The Sun

My daughter, 19, got hooked on ‘zombie vapes' – then she plunged to her death from our home… my warning to parents

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Female travel influencers spark backlash after 'glamourising' Taliban-run Afghanistan where women live under a 'gender apartheid'
Female travel influencers spark backlash after 'glamourising' Taliban-run Afghanistan where women live under a 'gender apartheid'

Daily Mail​

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  • Daily Mail​

Female travel influencers spark backlash after 'glamourising' Taliban-run Afghanistan where women live under a 'gender apartheid'

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Another asked: 'Why would you want to go somewhere that oppresses women?' A third said: 'And by traveling there, you are supporting this… not sure why you'd go while it's under Taliban rule. 'Officials have reportedly shut down beauty salons run by women. At one hospital, authorities ordered staff not to provide care to unaccompanied female patients.' A fourth added: 'What possessed you as a woman to want to visit a place where women are 'not allowed' to do things? Genuinely curious.' @margarittasworld They weren't voiceless. They were powerful in a way most never learn to see. Afghanistan changed me. This is for the women behind the veil. I love you. #femininefrequency #afghanistan #spiritwalker #presenceispower #womenoflight #veilwisdom #margarittasworld #afghan #kabul #fyp #foryou #travel #natgeo ♬ Kulning - Calling the Spring - Jonna Jinton 'Oh yeah going to a country where women are treated so badly for a week and then going back to your safe country. Lovely,' said someone else. Another questioned: 'why on earth would go and spend money in a country where women have zero rights now? that's actually disgraceful, especially as a woman.' But, although Chloe's footage received many negative remarks, some praised her content. 'This is amazing, loving these videos about these places of the world ,' one person said. Another added: 'As a Muslim girly I love how respectful you are and honest thank you… so much respect for you travelling without boundaries! A true travel vlogger.' Chloe isn't the only influencer to spark controversy by encouraging tourism to Afghanistan as a German TikToker also landed herself in hot water recently. Margaritta, 33, took a three-month solo trip in May 2024 to the country. She praised the Afghan way of life and said she felt safe and even powerful as a woman during her visit. While acknowledging that the Taliban had imposed strict laws on women, Margaritta, said she viewed them instead as a sign that 'women have value, and they are valued as precious.'. In one TikTok, she stated that women were the 'womb carriers,' which means 'any excellence a man demonstrates, he got from a woman near him.' Her comments were echoed by 31-year-old Zoe Stephens, a British travel vlogger and tour guide from Liverpool, England, who has visited Afghanistan three times. 'All we see of the women in Afghanistan is shapes behind burqas,' she told NBC News. 'But when I got there, I realized that ... there's a lot more nuance to it.' Having spent time with some Afghan women in their homes she added that much of this was not on video or photographed because 'it's very private.' Zoe regularly shares her experiences with over 70,000 followers on her Instagram accounts, @zoediscovers and @zoediscoversnk. In one of her posts, Zoe filmed laughing with local Afghan women as she explores lakes, mosques and mountain trails. In another she holds a selfie stick as she drives through the countryside on a tour bus. Internationally renowned Afghan activist and scholar Orzala Nemat, currently a visiting fellow at the London-based think tank Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), said that the surge of foreign influencers in Afghanistan was deeply concerning. 'What we're seeing instead is a curated, sanitized version of the country that conveniently erases the brutal realities faced by Afghan women under Taliban rule,' Orzala told NBC News. Afghanistan has seen a recent travel boost, four years after Taliban forces captured the capital city of Kabul on August 15, 2021, following the withdrawal of American troops under the Biden administration. Deputy Minister of Tourism Qudratullah Jamal told The Associated Press (AP) that Afghanistan had nearly 9,000 foreign visitors last year — with 3,000 tourists in the first three months of this year. 'Tourism brings many benefits to a country,' he said. 'We have considered those benefits and aim for our nation to take full advantage of them.' United Nations educational, scientific and cultural organization director-general Audrey Azoulay told Fox News Digital in a statement that the Taliban has wiped out any gains for Afghan women. 'This exclusion of women from public life in Afghanistan has disastrous consequences for the country's long-term development,' she said.

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