• NEO ‘80s – Peter De Potter

    Date posted: June 15, 2006 Author: jolanta

    NEO ‘80s

    Peter De Potter

    Don’t believe the headlines in nowadays
    glossy fashion magazines or the recent slogans from the record company’s
    pr-machines: the eighties are NOT back and no, we will NOT be dragged ‘back to
    eighties’. That decade is over, it all happened 20 odd years ago and we still
    haven’t mastered the art of actually travelling back in time. Living in the
    present time is, well, tough enough.

     

    Yet
    certain memories linger and some flashbacks won’t fade out. The eighties, the
    real eighties, made for some groundbreaking changes, in fashion, music and
    media – the eighties even altered the way we now perceive those three zones of
    popular culture. Obviously there were fads and hypes and short-lived trends
    back then as well, but in retrospect, the eighties still radiate an overall
    suggestion of endless possibility and unlimited creativity. Nowadays, we look
    back on the eighties as a decade of experiment, freedom, abandon, overload
    even. And rightly so.

     

    At
    the end of the nineties, the then much-coveted minimalism and realism went into
    overload too. Popular culture, in dire need of anything exciting or rebellious,
    took its obsession with fame and down-beaten glamour to its logical end,
    resulting in the blandness of logomania and the advent of cynical
    reality-sitcoms. At the turn of the millennium, modern life was crammed with
    insignificant starlets acting like plastic divas, house clubs turning into
    consumerist supermarkets of sound and fashion houses playing it as safe as
    possible. Too much, too little…too bad.

     

    Little
    wonder then some smart insiders tried to investigate where and when it all went
    wrong. In dusting off their old notebooks, they rediscovered the true pioneers
    of post-modern bravado and creative eclecticism: fashion stylists like Ray
    Petri and Simon Foxton, style provocateurs like Leigh Bowery and Jean Paul
    Goude, iconic image-makers like Bruce Weber and Derek Jarman, pop iconoclasts
    like Morrissey and Boy George, wizards of pr�t-�-porter like Jean-Paul Gaultier
    and Bodymap, graphic artists like Neville Brody and Peter Saville… all of them
    got re-examined and re-appropriated by today’s cutting edge fashion magazines,
    webzines and consultancy agencies. Young designers like Nicolas Ghesqui�re
    (Balenciaga), Luella Bartley and Jeremy Scott decidedly reworked the kind of
    geometrical shapes and sharp looks that defined (at least a part of) the
    eighties aesthetics, while more introspective designers like Raf Simons,
    Veronique Branquinho and Bernhard Willhelm reminisced about their teenage
    memories from that decade.

    Obviously
    and inevitably, there has been a lot of pastiche and tongue-in-cheek
    plagiarism, as witnessed in recent fashion stories or catwalk shows. Already,
    we have seen one pair of ironic shoulder pads or funny legwarmers too many. But
    those aside, it’s clear that the sudden reappraisal of the eighties was for the
    most part heartfelt and necessary: anything, anything to rock the boat again
    and raid against the tedious status-quo.

     

    Those
    cravings for upheaval and excitement have been particularly strong within the
    music scene. To counter the facelessness of the current house/techno scene and
    the overt materialism of today’s hip-hop crews, some (now influential) pop
    artists have started to embrace the daring tactics of early eighties bands
    again, harking back to their original electronic sounds and outlandish on-stage
    antics. In true eighties mode, it hasn’t stopped at music: these new artists
    and bands are fusing their radical electro tunes with fashion and performance,
    creating a vivid, almost anarchic spectacle in the process. NYC’s
    Fischerspooner for instance were spawned from the art scene and now perform
    both in art galleries and at major festivals. While their music takes quite a
    few pointers from the synthesizer bands from the early eighties, their
    ambitious, almost phantasmagorical take on video art, costume design and
    advertising reveals a very modern approach to their craft. Berlin’s Chicks On
    Speed on the other hand prefer a more political stance, icing their electro
    tunes with a fierce do-it-yourself attitude. Other acts like Peaches, Miss
    Kitten, Ladytron or Vive La F�te, each in their own way, combine a genuine love
    for proto-electro sounds with a wayward sense of glamour and sexuality. It’s
    not only sequencers and beatboxes though: American guitar bands like Interpol,
    The Rapture or The Yeah Yeah Yeahs are getting critical acclaim for their
    reinvention of early eighties post-punk and funk.

     

    This recent tidal wave of neo-80 visuals and sounds has been
    tested, analyzed and criticized, but a part of today’s young generation never
    saw this movement as some kind of media invention. On the contrary: young kids
    all over the world took inspiration from the refreshed outlook on the original
    eighties and got on the case themselves. Not blinded by nostalgia or irony, the
    young crop has been creating their own little subculture again: impromptu,
    underground neo-electro parties, extravagant make-up, do-it-yourself styling
    with thrift shop clothes and homemade badges, radical haircuts…yes, everything
    to generate the feeling of EXCESS. And a sense of humour, bearing in mind the
    words of Adam Ant: ‘ridicule is nothing to be scared of’.

     

    Pitti Imagine’s exhibition ‘EXCESS’
    would not be complete without this current phenomenon of neo-80’s. A video
    installation, commissioned especially for this exhibition, tackles this
    movement in a surprisingly conceptual way. Instead of exhibiting the work of
    the well-publicized movers and shakers, the video installation focuses on three
    anonymous kids, each in their own attire and surroundings. Starting out as an
    evocative documentary, the video quickly morphs into an action piece, in which
    the three protagonists take control over their influences and transmit their
    own reflection on the phenomenon of the neo-80’s. Working on many different levels,
    the video installation prefers emotion over facts, and alertness over
    nostalgia.

     

    The
    idea of the neo-80’s is also explored in the catalogue book that accompanies
    the exhibition. A 32-page section gives an insight into the many different
    aspects of the neo-80’s sentiments, showcasing fashion (specific collections by
    Veronique Branquinho, Louis Vuitton by Marc Jacobs, Balenciaga by Nicolas
    Ghesqui�re, John Galliano, Raf Simons among others), music (record cover
    artwork or visuals of artists like Miss Kitten, Fischerspooner, Zoot Woman and
    others), fashion stories, magazine design, photography and film. None of the
    names included in the catalogue are meant to be pigeonholed as ‘typical
    neo-80’s’…instead, the ensemble of the selected images and words conjure up an
    atmosphere, where light-heartedness, yes, excessiveness meets a sincere
    yearning for less complicated times.

     

    Info
    about the exhibition:

    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>a Fondazione Pitti Immagine
    Discovery project

    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>for the 50th anniversary of the
    Centro di Firenze per la Moda Italiana

    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>in collaboration with Pitti
    Immagine

    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>organized by Maria Luisa Frisa and
    Stefano Tonchi  

    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>Florence, Stazione Leopolda

    8
    January – 8 February 2004

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