Wednesday 29 March 2023

Melbourne Now: A Vast, Sprawling and Inspiring Exhibition that Seems to Burst out of its Architectural Framework

Painting above, from the Melbourne Now show, by Julia Ciccarone, Witness, 2021. Cover image: Julia Ciccarone, The Other World, 2021. © Julia Ciccarone and Niagara Galleries. Both photographs: Mark Ashkanasy






By Sasha Grishin, Australian National University

Review: Melbourne Now, National Gallery of Victoria.

Melbourne Now 2013 is still spoken about with reverence.

It was a memorable exhibition: a shot of Viagra to the exhibiting of contemporary Australian art by a public art gallery. It was immense, occupying both buildings of the National Gallery of Victoria and surrounds, and it brought to the fore much art that had never been seen before, combined with some well-known artists still making interesting work.

Melbourne Now 2023 is a more targeted exhibition, confined to the Federation Square building, with roughly half the number of exhibitors compared with its predecessor a decade earlier.

The show does combine the work of some well-established artists, including Shaun Gladwell, Christian Thompson, Katherine Hattam and Julia Ciccarone, with a splurge of fresh blood, names largely unknown outside a tight circle within the arts community.

Portrait of Georgia Banks © Georgia Banks. Photo: Kerry Leonard

Art is treated within a broad spectrum of the cultural landscape to include not only painters, printmakers, sculptors, photographers, filmmakers and installation artists, but also designers, studios, firms, practising architects, ceramicists, video artists and those working in virtual reality, jewellery, performance, product design and publishing.

These are some of the people who now, or in the near future, will design the way our world looks, feels and operates.

In a vast, sprawling and inspiring exhibition that seems to burst out of its architectural framework, it is pointless to debate omissions in the selection of artists when we are surrounded by so much vital and interesting art that challenges us on so many levels.

Intense visual excitement

Many of the artists are making their NGV debut. This is not a “stable” of artists that has been fostered by a gallery, an accusation that has been levelled, with some justification, at several state galleries.

Many of these artists are not new to the institutional exhibiting scene and may have been seen in some regional galleries, public art spaces and dedicated municipal art centres, but they are new to the NGV and the broader public.

There is a sustained and intense visual excitement that pervades all levels of The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia.

We move from Rel Pham’s huge shrine-like “temple” in a darkened room, accompanied by a chorus of 640 computer fans with their cyberspace breeze, to Jenna Lee’s illuminated lanterns in forms reminiscent of traditional Gulumerridjin (Larrakia) dilly bags, and Troy Emery’s quirky nearly three-metre-long textile sculpture, Mountain climber, ready to pounce on the viewer.

Installation view of Rel Pham ’s Temple 2022 - 2023 on display as part of the Melbourne Now exhibition at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne from 24 March – 20 August 2023. Image: Sean Fennessy

Although each of these works is spectacular and packs a considerable wow factor, they cannot be dismissed as purely hedonistic eye candy designed as an escapist parachute out of reality.

Pham questions the ecological sustainability in our reliance on technology with the colours of the neon illumination chosen for symbolic considerations in Asian cultures. He creates an environment where the physical and digital worlds blur.

Lee, a Larrakia, Wardaman and Karajarri artist, views her lanterns as illuminating her ancestry and its mystical complexities.

Illuminated yellow dilly bags
Installation view of Jenna Lee ’s Balarr (To become light) 2023 on display as part of the Melbourne Now exhibition at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne from 24 March – 20 August 2023. Image: Sean Fennessy

Emery’s work affected me more directly than I anticipated. I was prepared for an encounter with something approaching high kitsch with brightly coloured pom-poms forming the surface of this creature. For all its playfulness, there is something quite sombre in an encounter with this giant feline, shown like a specimen taken out of the wild, now beautified and preserved in a museum.

It’s possibly something to do with animal extinction and an interrogation of the relationship between us and non-human animals.

It will become a new icon for our time.

Installation view of Troy Emery’s work Mountain climber 2022 on display as part of the Melbourne Now exhibition at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne from 24 March – 20 August 2023. Image: Tom Ross

Art meets design

The distinction between arts and crafts dissolved many decades ago. Melbourne Now continues the process in dissolving the distinction between the visual arts as studio practice and functional design, fashion and applied photography.

The Design Wall that caused major ripples a decade ago has returned as a large-scale installation representing 23 Victorian design studios that over the past decade created new consumer products from guitars, pink cricket balls to electric motorbikes.

Guitars, skateboards and showers.
Installation view of Design Wall on display as part of the Melbourne Now exhibition at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne from 24 March – 20 August 2023. Image: Peter Bennett

Fashion Now brings together about 20 local fashion designers including J’Aton Couture, Ngali and Kara Baker.

Jewellery Now carries out a similar exercise with contemporary jewellers spread over about 60 new or recent pieces that explore a variety of forms. They include incredible pieces by Inari Kiuru, Tessa Blazey, Kirsten Lyttle and Anke Kindle.

Rings
Installation view of Tessa Blazey’s work on display as part of the Melbourne Now exhibition at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne from 24 March – 20 August 2023. Image: Tom Ross

As so much in this exhibition, fundamental questions are raised concerning boundaries. What constitutes jewellery practice today and how is jewellery consumed by society?

Civic Architecture investigates five award-winning civic projects by Melbourne architects where different neighbourhoods have been transformed.

No House Style assembles some Melbourne-based furniture designers and architects who have departed from mainstream trends to create their own unique language.

Wooden furniture.
Installation view of No House Style on display as part of the Melbourne Now exhibition at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne from 24 March – 20 August 2023. Image: Tom Ross

Vessels examines 15 artists who create containers from materials as varied as ceramics, fibre, mixed media and experimental biomaterials.

The art of photography is interrogated through Slippery Images, a glance at the work of 12 photographers. Printmaking is represented with a Print Portfolio by 12 printmakers plus the irrepressible Gracia and Louise and their bat installation.

Artwork of a bat.
Installation view of Gracia and Louise’s The remaking of things 2023 on display as part of the Melbourne Now exhibition at The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia, Melbourne from 24 March – 20 August 2023. Image: Sean Fennessy

A memorable exhibition

Conceived as a snapshot of visual culture in Melbourne and Victoria, this exhibition is challenging, visually exciting and memorable.

If you find it a little bewildering, you can turn to Gee, an AI chatbot developed by Georgia Banks, who has been programmed as a target for your affections or lie down for Shaun Gladwell’s out-of-body experience.

Melbourne Now is at the The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia until August 20.The Conversation

Sasha Grishin, Adjunct Professor of Art History, Australian National University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. 

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Wednesday 22 March 2023

Entrancing New York Exhibition at the Frick Madison: The Gregory Gift

Portrait of Woman, ca. 1730 by Rosalba Carriera (1673 ~1757). Pastel on paper, glued on canvas. Cover detail of a 16th century plaque, by Jean de Court. Limoges, enamel on copper, parcel gilt. Both from the Frick Collection, Gift of Alexis Gregory, 2020 and 2021. Photographs: Joseph Coscia Jnr. 






Prepare to be transported through time and space to a world of exquisite decorative arts as we explore The Frick Collection's latest exhibition. The Gregory Gift, a bequest from the collection of Alexis Gregory, is a beautifully curated show of twenty-eight objects rich in historical and cultural significance. Among them are fifteen Limoges enamels, two clocks, and two ewers, to name just a few.  The collection echoes the Kunstkammers created by princes during the Renaissance, where they would display a variety of precious objects, opening new areas of research, writes Antonio Visconti 

James Cox (British ca. 1723~1800)
Musical Automation Rhinoceros Clock
ca.1765~1772. Gilt bronze, silver, enamel,
paste jewels, white marble and amber.
39.5 x 21.3 x 8.9cm. The Frick Collection
Gift of Alexis Gregory, 2021.
Photograph: Joseph Coscia Jnr.


The Frick Collection
in New York City has long been a home for some of the finest collections of decorative art in the world. The museum has been able to enrich its collections over the years through the generosity of various collectors who have donated important objects. 

The Gregory Gift, a bequest from the collection of Alexis Gregory, has been one of the most significant contributions to the museum in recent times. This remarkable bequest, which was received in 2020, comprises twenty-eight objects that are rich in historical and cultural significance.

The Gregory Gift is a collection of exquisite objects that are crafted in a variety of media and forms. These luxury objects suggest a fine collector's cabinet or Kunstkammer. 

Among the items are fifteen Limoges enamels, two clocks, two ewers, a gilt-bronze sculpture, a serpentine tankard, an ivory hilt, a rhinoceros horn cup, a pomander, and two stunning pastels by Rosalba Carriera. The collection is beautifully curated and is exhibited together for the first time at the Frick Madison until July 9, 2023.

Ian Wardropper, the Director of the Frick, expressed his gratitude for the bequest and announced that the exhibition would be mounted in memory of Alexis Gregory. Wardropper stated that "Alexis Gregory had one of the finest collections of Renaissance and Rococo decorative arts in this country. His deep affection for the Frick led to his bequest of a selection of a superb group of objects, and we are gratified to mount this exhibition in his memory."

The Gregory Gift is a collection of exquisite objects that are crafted in a variety of media and forms.

Attributed to Domenico Cucci and workshop
Manufacture des Gobelins, Paris, 1662~1664.
Figure of Louis XIV. Gilt bronze on a
porphyry base. 30.6 x 30.3 x 17.9cm
The Frick Collection, Gift of
Alexis Gregrory, 2021.
Photograph: Joseph Coscia Jnr
Alexis Gregory was a man who had an abiding passion for the arts. His career in book publishing led him to establish the celebrated Vendome Press, which published significant volumes on French culture and art. 

Gregory's contributions to and engagement in the arts included serving on art committees at several cultural institutions in the United States. 

He served on the visiting committees of European Paintings and European Sculpture and Decorative Arts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His history with the Frick began with frequent visits to the museum as a youth. 

On one occasion, Gregory left the boarding school he was attending with a classmate to visit the museum and managed to convince his friend that he lived in its mansion, as everyone they encountered on staff seemed to know him extremely well.

Gregory's interest in collecting art began early in life. At the age of eighteen, he purchased his first Renaissance bronze, which marked the starting point of his collection. Gregory collected widely, from paintings and works on paper to bronzes and sculptures. 

In the 1980s, his deep interest in European decorative arts prompted him to exchange one of the Impressionist paintings he had inherited from his parents for an assortment of bronzes, sculptures, and Limoges enamels, as well as a watercolor. He later expanded his collection with additional sculptures, Italian bronzes, and Limoges enamels, continuing throughout his life to acquire objects from the United States and Europe.

At the age of eighteen, Gregory purchased his first Renaissance bronze, which marked the starting point of his collection.

Pierre Reymond, French 1512 ~ after 1584
One of a Pair of Covered Tazzas, 16th Century
Limoges, enamel on copper, parcel gilt
21.6 x 18.4cm. The Frick Collection
Gift of Alexis Gregory, 2021.
Photograph: Joseph Coscia Jnr


Gregory's collection echoes, in many ways, the Kunstkammers created by princes during the Renaissance, where they would not only display enamels, faience, carved ivories, automatons and clocks, and precious and mounted metalwork, but also show exotic natural specimens. 

His bequest to The Frick Collection, therefore, opens new areas of research and lays the groundwork for exciting projects. 

From research into the context of their creation to technical analyses expanding our knowledge of how these objects were produced, the exhibition at Frick Madison celebrates Alexis Gregory's generous gift and The Frick Collection's commitment to the display of European decorative arts.


The Gregory Gift exhibition is on show at the Frick Madison until July 6th, 2023, 945 Madison Avenue at 75th Street, New York, NY 10021. Museum hours: Thursday through Sunday, 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.; closed Monday through Wednesday.

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Wednesday 15 March 2023

Designer in Focus: Yuima Nakazato ~ Creating a Sustainable Fashion Future

Portrait of Yuima Nakazato at the Maison Baccarat in Paris and cover picture of the designer's Spring/Summer 2023/24 collection at the Palais de Tokyo by Elli Ioannou for DAM
Japanese designer Yuima Nakazato has gained international recognition for his innovative approach to fashion and sustainability and his passion for the environment. Called Inherit, his latest collection is inspired by the mountains of discarded clothing he witnessed in Kenya. In an exclusive interview, he discusses his pioneering design philosophy and vision for the future. Story by Jeanne-Marie Cilento. Reporting by Antonio Visconti.  Photography by Elli IoannouNathan Geary & Matthew Fisher

Designer Yuima Nakazato backstage 
at his haute couture show in Paris.
Photograph: Nathan Geary
Yuima Nakazato not only creates avant-garde designs incorporating new technologies but uses his fashion collections to address environmental issues in unprecedented ways. When the designer travelled to Kenya, he wanted to see the waste situation and also to understand how people live there by using only what they get from the land. 

A documentary film directed by Tokyo-based Kousai Sekine about this trip, the creation of the Spring/Summer 2023-24 collection and the designer's vision for the future of fashion, will be released later this year. 

Nakazato's impressions of Kenya remain kaleidoscopic, he felt both hope and despair throughout the visit, and was touched by seeing the handmade details of what the tribespeople wore, and the intricate beaded jewellery they made themselves. But he was stunned by the enormous amount of garbage piling up in the country.

"My journey began with coming face-to-face with a vast amount of leftover clothing, an experience that left me feeling completely overwhelmed," he explains. "Gazing upon mountains of discarded garments, I was tormented by a sense of despair. It was undeniably obvious that cheap and generic attire such as denim and T-shirts had become utterly universal. A simple yet fundamental question arose in my mind: 'Do we really need to make any more clothes?''

"Gazing upon mountains of discarded garments, I was tormented by a sense of despair...A simple yet fundamental question arose in my mind: 'Do we really need to make any more clothes?'''

A shimmering, diaphanous design from 
Yuima Nakazato's latest collection.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou
"The amount of unwanted, disposed-of clothing is almost beyond counting. Left untreated, these discarded garments are a shameful epitome of the social issues we face today. 

"As someone who is responsible for designing clothes, I felt an urgent need to visit Kenya and witness this situation with my own eyes," says Nakazato

The designer's latest collection was presented during Paris Haute Couture week and was inspired by the trip to Kenya. "Rather than allowing myself to be overwhelmed by these issues, this collection represents my determination to continue searching for ways to make our world a better place," he explains.

Nakazato has been collaborating with Japanese company Seiko Epson for the past three years. The designer reveals that the collaboration is a partnership that combines the various technologies of Epson with his creativity to solve problems. Working together with the company, he hopes to change the future of the fashion industry by continuing to experiment with new sustainable technology and implement the successful results. 

"Rather than allowing myself to be overwhelmed, this collection represents my determination to continue searching for ways to make our world a better place."  


Beautiful, rich colours contrasted with
the more earthy pieces inspired by 
the African desert. 
Photograph: Nathan Geary
The production of the Spring/Summer 2023-24 collection began when 150 kilograms of used clothing was brought back to Japan from Africa. As most of the clothes did not have proper labels, it was impossible to tell where they were from or what they were made of, 

"These sorts of clothes are generally very difficult to recycle, but with Seiko Epson's dry fibre technology (DFT) we were able to convert them into new textiles for creating garments," Nakazato says. "It was almost as if we were rescuing clothes that had nowhere else to go." This technology pulverizes old clothes and turns them into new materials. The designer has high hopes for its potential as a form of recycling in the fashion industry.

"DFT is really new, and we were introduced to it only recently, but our response was quick, and we are the first to bring this technology to real clothing, " he explains. "We are also using Epson’s Digital textile printing, which reduces the amount of water and the environmental impact while at the same time, not impairing the expressive power of prints." 

"It was almost as if we were rescuing clothes that had nowhere else to go." 

The enveloping swathes of silk organza
using the new textile printing technology 
by Epson where hand-drawn sketches 
can be scanned on to the fabric.
Photograph Matthew Fisher 

This technology also allowed Nakazato to transmit his impressions of Africa onto fabric. The diaphanous, chiffon-like colorful textiles used in the collection were created using Epson’s digital textile printing. 

The rich hues and earthy tones were printed on silk organza fabric using this technology by scanning sketches inspired by Kenyan landscapes.

Nakazato learned how important water resources are in Kenya, and he embraced the importance of Epson’s technology, which enables printing with less water consumption. 

Photographs were also printed for an installation designed to show Earth’s destruction by humanity at Yuima Nakazato's haute couture show at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris. 

The models appeared to walk over the "mountains of garbage" the designer had seen in Kenya. After the show, the set design was repurposed using Epson’s recycling technology.

Nakazato says he is continuing to experiment with his Type-1, Brewed Protein and Biosmocking projects. 

"Many items from this collection’s 29 looks are Type-1 products which are continually improved, and they remain our signature/standard items. Regarding Biosmocking using Brewed protein™, we also gathered stones from the largest desert in East Africa and ground them down to nano-size natural pigments using submicron/nanoparticle technology developed by the Japanese Painting Laboratory at Joshibi University of Art and Design."

Yuima Nakazato learned how important water resources are in places like Kenya and uses new technology which enables printing with less consumption.   


Swathed in Yuima Nakazato's creations, models
wait backstage before the show at the Palais de Tokyo
 in Paris. Photograph: Elli Ioannou
"These pigments were used to make dyes, which were employed to colour the synthetic Brewed Protein™ materials developed by Spiber Inc. that feature in the collection. 

Witnessing the reddish-brown landscape from the desert being dyed into the artificial protein fibres was quite beautiful, as if the hot, dry African air itself was being carried into the fabric."

The voluminous designs in the new collection allow great freedom for the wearer. "Like the Shibori technique, which has been evolving for the past three seasons, holes are made in the fabric and strings are passed through, making the rectangular fabric three-dimensional and wrapping it around the body in a special way," the designer explains.

"This idea was inspired by the fact that kimonos are made from rectangular pieces of cloth, and this season I felt that the pattern of the Kenyan tribesmen wrapping the cloth around their bodies resembled the pattern of kimonos and the idea expanded from there."

"This season I felt the pattern of the Kenyan tribesmen wrapping the cloth around their bodies resembled the pattern of kimonos."

The jewellery specially designed for the
 collection worn with the fabric that 
captures the earthy Kenyan landscape.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou
 
The designer's startling neckpieces provided a dramatic foil to the fluid and flowing designs in the collection, "The ceramic jewellery was inspired by the beadwork worn by Kenyan desert tribesmen," he comments. 

"In the course of my research, I discovered that bead decorations have been handed down from the most ancient times of humankind for 100,000 years and exist all over the world.

"Wearing decoration is the root of fashion, it is an act of wearing culture and is the basis of jewellery design. I wanted to once again propose bead decoration as a cultural act that should not be lost in contemporary fashion and in thinking about future clothing." 

The designer travelled from Nairobi to the hinterland of Northern Kenya and witnessed tribespeople living in the desert, suffering from the harsh conditions created by water shortages, caused by climate change. The people dress in vivid clothes and yet endure a life in an inhospitable environment.  

The designer's startling ceramic neckpieces provide a dramatic foil to the fluid and flowing designs in the collection.

The colours in the new collection were
inspired by the vivid hues of the clothes
Nakazato saw in Kenya.
Photograph: Elli Ioannou

"I was particularly captivated by their clothing: against a backdrop of desert sand, the tribespeople wrap their bodies in many colorful fabrics, utilizing oranges, greens, and purples and wearing beaded necklaces and earrings."  

Nakazato is an idealist and has always seen his work as not only about creating beautiful, useful garments but also about using fashion as a tool for positive change. 

"I want to create clothes that have a deeper meaning, clothes that will inspire people to think about the world and how they can contribute." His dedication to sustainable practices and his respect for tradition are evident in all of his collections,

From the start of his career, Yuima Nakazato has been driven by his own particular vision. Seven years after he graduated from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp in 2008, Nakazato had already established his eponymous fashion label by the time he was 30 years old. The following year, in 2016, he had been formally selected as a guest designer for Haute Couture Week, cementing his place as one of the rising stars in the industry. He has since continued to showcase his collections at Paris Fashion Week, where he entrances audiences with his unique fusion of technology and craftsmanship.

"I want to create clothes that have a deeper meaning, clothes that will inspire people to think about the world and how they can contribute."

Yuima Nakazato continues to develop
his Type-1 designs and Biosmocking 
projects that also contribute to 
creating sustainable fashion.
Photograph: Matthew Fisher
 
Nakazato has shown each season that he is more than just a talented designer but a deep thinker who is using his work to address social and environmental issues and push the boundaries of what is possible in the world of fashion. In 2021, he launched the Fashion Frontier Program, an educational initiative designed to empower the next generation of fashion designers.

With the launch of the program, Nakazato is on a mission to discover and nurture future fashion designers who share his vision and courage. The program aims to both educate young fashion designers and encourage them to overcome challenges and create a better society. While the program is currently based in Japan, designers from all over the world can submit their applications.

Through his collections and his work with the Fashion Frontier Program, Yuima Nakazato is redefining what it means to be a fashion designer in the 21st century. He is breaking down barriers and challenging conventional ideas about fashion, harnessing both science and industry, to create a greener, more inclusive, and socially conscious industry.

Highlights of Yuima Nakazato's Spring/Summer 2023/24 Haute Couture Collection in Paris 

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher



Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher



Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Nathan Geary


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Nathan Geary

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Nathan Geary


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Nathan Geary


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Nathan Geary 


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Nathan Geary

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Matthew Fisher

Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Nathan Geary





Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou



Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou



Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Nathan Geary


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou


Yuima Nakazato Inherit Haute Couture Collection Spring/Summer 2023-24 Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France. Photograph: Elli Ioannou


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