Facetasm’s Hybrid Shapes
For the Autumn/Winter 2020 collection, the founder of Facetasm, Hiromichi Ochiai, set up in the Church of Saint-Merry in Paris.
View this post on Instagram
Japanese designer Hiromichi Ochiai unveiled a collection that played with superimposition and a particularly daring mixture of patterns, combining checks, animal motifs and polka dots. True to form, the designer brought together influences from classicism to baroque and from gothic style to pop culture. Tulle, nylon, velvet, denim, ribbons… Hiromichi Ochiai is full of ideas and expresses himself with fabric. The garments are deconstructed and the colours are many and varied, as demonstrated by this dress-shirt-kimono and this artistic silhouette.
Facetasm, the name of which refers to the many facets that can be discovered in one object, was created in 2007. Hiromichi Ochiai grew up and studied in Tokyo, at Bunka Fashion College, and graduated in 1999. Over the following eight years, he worked for fabric company Guildwork as an assistant for the brand NGAP, before going on to launch his own brand. He made his first appearance on the catwalk in Tokyo in 2011.
View this post on Instagram
International recognition
This collection would see him reach the final of the Tokyo Fashion Award three years later. That same year, Georgio Armani invited him to show his collection at Milan Fashion Week. Two years later, in 2016, he presented his pieces in Paris for the first time, and was then shortlisted for the prestigious LVMH Prize. Since then, Facetasm has been breaking the rules and reinventing itself each season, for example by including technicwear shapes. Facetasm represents a mix of genres, oscillating between complexity and simplicity, eccentricity and minimalism.
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
View this post on Instagram
TRENDING
-
‘YUGEN’ at Art Fair Tokyo: Illumination through Obscurity
In this exhibition curated by Tara Londi, eight international artists gave their rendition of the fundamental Japanese aesthetic concept.
-
A Masterful Film Adaptation of a Short Story by Murakami
'Burning' by filmmaker Lee Chang Dong is based on the short story 'Barn Burning' by the iconic Japanese writer, published in 1987.
-
Taking Time to Watch the Forest Breathe With Takeshi Shikama
Combining history with a photographic technique, 'Silent Respiration of Forests' is a call to rethink our relationship with nature.
-
Ceramics in Its Natural State, by Takashi Endo
When making his pieces, the artist lets the imperfection of their materials appear, as a means of paying tribute to their natural origin.
-
Colour Photos of Yakuza Tattoos from the Meiji Period
19th-century photographs have captured the usually hidden tattoos that covered the bodies of the members of Japanese organised crime gangs.