Showing posts with label Eiko Ishioka. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eiko Ishioka. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 04, 2012

Eiko Ishioka, Multifaceted Designer and Oscar Winner, Dies at 73

Cover of "The Cell (New Line Platinum Ser...
Cover of The Cell (New Line Platinum Series)
Damn this story went completely under my radar, and this happened since January 21 this year.  Ever since I came across her name after being blown away by her costume designs in the movie 'The Cell' in 2000, I saw her as one of my favourite costume designers EVER!!
Now she is gone, but has left a legacy of awesome work behind  for us to appreciate and learn from.
Rest in Peace Eiko Ishioka.

Eiko Ishioka
"Eiko Ishioka, a designer who brought an eerie, sensual surrealism to film and theater, album covers, the Olympics and Cirque du Soleil, in the process earning an Oscar, a Grammy and a string of other honors, died on Saturday in Tokyo. She was 73. 

The cause was pancreatic cancer, her studio manager, Tracy Roberts, said.
Trained as a graphic designer, Ms. Ishioka was for decades considered the foremost art director in Japan; she later came to be known as one of the foremost in the world.
Ms. Ishioka won an Oscar for costume design
 in 1992 for “Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula.'”
 Her outfits included a heavy wedding dress
 worn by the actress Sadie Frost.
Ms. Ishioka won an Academy Award for costume design in 1992 for “Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula,’ ” directed by Francis Ford Coppola. Her outfits for the film included a suit of full body armor for the title character (played by Gary Oldman), whose glistening red color and all-over corrugation made it look like exposed musculature, and a voluminous wedding dress worn by the actress Sadie Frost, with a stiff, round, aggressive lace collar inspired by the ruffs of frill-necked lizards.
These typified Ms. Ishioka’s aesthetic. A deliberate marriage of East and West — she had lived in Manhattan for many years — it simultaneously embraced the gothic, the otherworldly, the dramatic and the unsettling and was suffused with a powerful, dark eroticism. Her work, whose outsize stylization dazzled some critics and discomforted others, was provocative in every possible sense of the word, and it was meant to be.
Ms. Ishioka was closely associated with the director Tarsem Singh, for whom she designed costumes for four films. In the first, “The Cell” (2000), she encased Jennifer Lopez, who plays a psychologist trapped by a serial killer, in a headpiece that resembled a cross between a rigid neck brace and a forbidding bird cage.
“Jennifer asked me if I could make it more comfortable,” Ms. Ishioka told The Ottawa Citizen in 2000, “but I said, ‘No, you’re supposed to be tortured.’ 
For Mr. Singh, she also costumed “The Fall” (2006), an adventure fantasy, and “Immortals,” a violent tale of ancient Greece released last year. Their fourth collaboration, “Mirror Mirror,” an adaptation of “Snow White,” is set for release in March.
Ms. Ishioka’s other film work includes the production design of “Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters,” Paul Schrader’s 1985 film about the doomed writer Yukio Mishima. That year the Cannes Film Festival jury awarded her — along with the film’s cinematographer, John Bailey, and its composer, Philip Glass — a special prize for “artistic contribution.”
  Sara Krulwich/The New York Times                                                                                  
      Ms. Ishioka's costumes for the musical  "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark."
For the Broadway stage, Ms. Ishioka designed sets and costumes for David Henry Hwang’s 1988 drama “M. Butterfly,” for which she earned two Tony nominations, and, most recently, costumes for the musical “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark.”
She won a Grammy Award in 1986 for her design of Miles Davis’s album “Tutu,” whose cover is dominated by an Irving Penn photograph of Mr. Davis, shot in extreme close-up and starkly lighted.
Eiko Ishioka was born in Tokyo on July 12, 1938. Her artistic pursuits were encouraged by her parents: her father was a graphic designer, her mother a homemaker who, in accordance with the social norms of the day, had forsaken literary ambitions to marry and raise children.
But when Eiko, as an undergraduate at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, announced that she planned to be a graphic artist, even her father warned that she would have a much easier life designing things like shoes or dolls. Graphic design in Japan, with its close connection to the sharp-elbowed world of advertising, was every inch a man’s game then.
The young Ms. Ishioka persevered, graduating in 1961 and joining the advertising division of the cosmetics giant Shiseido. She opened her own design concern in the early 1970s; among her chief clients was Parco, a chain of boutique shopping complexes for which she created advertising and promotional materials for more than a decade.
Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
Ms. Ishioka was also the director of costume design for the
 opening ceremony of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing
Ms. Ishioka’s work for Parco, which embodied an eclectic, avant-garde internationalism rarely seen in Japanese advertisements of the period, helped cement her reputation. Her print ads, for instance, sometimes showed models who were naked or nearly so, a rarity in Japanese advertising then.
“You’ve seen a kimono: they’re not big into full-on nudes,” Maggie Kinser Hohle, a writer on Japanese design, said this month in an interview for this obituary. (As Maggie Kinser Saiki, she is the author of “12 Japanese Masters,” a book about design that features Ms. Ishioka.) “That’s extremely shocking. And yet she did it in a way that made you drawn to the beauty of it, and then you realize you’re looking at nipples.”
Perhaps the most striking thing about Ms. Ishioka’s ads was that they rarely depicted any actual item sold at Parco. For Japanese television, she created a Parco commercial in which, over the course of a minute and a half, the actress Faye Dunaway, black-clad against a black background, slowly and wordlessly peels and eats a hard-boiled egg.
In other work, Ms. Ishioka designed uniforms and outerwear for selected members of the Swiss, Canadian, Japanese and Spanish teams at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. She was also the director of costume design for the opening ceremony of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.
Ms. Ishioka’s portfolio extended to the circus and a magic show. She designed costumes for Cirque du Soleil’s “Varekai” (2002) and was the visual artistic director of the illusionist David Copperfield’s 1996 Broadway show, “Dreams and Nightmares.”
She also designed costumes for the singer Grace Jones’s “Hurricane” tour in 2009 (they were noteworthy even by Ms. Jones’s lofty standards for the outrĂ©) and directed Bjork’s music video “Cocoon.” Her books include “Eiko by Eiko” (1983) and “Eiko on Stage” (2000), both available in English.
Ms. Ishioka is survived by her husband, Nicholas Soultanakis, whom she married last year; her mother, Mitsuko Saegusa Ishioka; two brothers, Koichiro and Jun Ishioka; and a sister, Ryoko Ishioka.
Though she was known in particular for the form of her designs, Ms. Ishioka did not neglect function. For some athletes at the 2002 Winter Games, she created what she called the Concentration Coat, a full-length cocoon of foamlike fabric into which wearers could withdraw from the press scrum around them, podlike studies in portable solitude."






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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

IMMORTALS COSTUME DESIGNER EIKO ISHIOKA

I went to see the movie immortals last night, I  thought it rocked, Tarsim Singh is one of my favorite directors, and while IMMORTALS is just his 3rd movie (and I have seen them all)  like the others it ROCKS!
In costume design he has teamed up once again withe designer Eiko Ishioka, a designer I mentioned a couple post back.
take a look at this clip as she explains her approach to the design of the costumes in this movie.

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Saturday, November 05, 2011

K2K ALLIANCE & PARTNERS : The New Cool of the New School

The Yellow Sea.

Not since ‘Tantana’ has high mas and high fashion been merged the way K2K has merged the two with their presentation of ‘The waters seas of consciousness.  With this band as their opening gambit K2K have confidently placed themselves at the very cutting edge of contemporary mas.
In waters the designers Kathy and Karen Norman use the seas as a metaphor of mans consciousness and the evolution that consciousness may take in becoming self aware. Each section is named after a body of water that may have a historical/religious connection to the state of consciousness each section represents.


Unlike the fun bands of today, K2K  make it very clear that  they intend to bring back the old ethos  of story telling through the medium of mas, and reinventing  what they call the ‘ the cinematic  beauty  through choreography  and design’.  Another factor that places K2K at least 3 tiers above the likes of Yuma, tribe and the rest of fabulous fantasy merchants is the fact that they clearly recognise and appreciate the historical significance of the prestigious title ‘Band of the Year’, and boldly state that they intend to win it, a title we all know only the very best of the mas fraternity can claim on the streets of Port of Spain.

Break in tradition:

Unlike the legendary bands of yesteryear, that drew inspiration from epic Hollywood movies, historical events , great civilisations, or the richness of  Trinidad’s own cultural amalgam, K2K has drawn inspiration from some of the most popular and influential designers of fashion, film, and stage today. Looking at the mas of the Norman twins and tracing the possible seas of influence of these creations reveal this pantheon of fashion to us clearly.
Most of the head pieces take the curves and swirls in form, echoing the style of Philip Treacy,  in the sections you can see sprays of Jean Paul Gaultier, waves of Eiko Ishioka and a shimmer of of John Galliano. If there are any influences of any legendary mas designers in this band it is a splash of Peter Minshall in (rage and fury female).


Red sea rage and fury, looks like Eiko Ishioka's
Stargher  King in the movie 'The Cell'.



Looking outside the little box of Trinidad’s modern day carnival for new inspiration is a concept that I have, (as some of my readers say) ‘ranted on’ about for some time now.  It has baffled me over the years as to why none of the multitude of so called designers and bandleaders of the growing number of new bands have never attempted to also draw from the fashion industries extreme designers who’s show’s and avant-garde designs can so easily be transferred to the genre of contemporary mas.

Sea of Galilee.
When the Blog Trinidad’s Carnivals gave me the opportunity to put this question to the Norman twins this as their reply.  

To be honest I am not quite sure. However, if “no one ever challenged the status quo everyone would think that the world was still flat”. Thus, we are trying to challenge the ordinary, think outside the box and offer the masquerader something different. Men like Peter Minshall & Wayne Berkeley have set a very high bar in mas making. They have put our generation in the launch pad and it is up to us to take-off and take mas into another arena. We hope to be those faces to take carnival to a new level by mixing fashion with mas, and expressing mas as a contemporary art form.” 

These ladies are definitely the pioneers of their generation. 

River Jordan.
This is without a doubt is a fashion centric mas, the men’s costumes are tailored in construction, straight lines, buckles and leather straps. The female costumes are powerful and iconic, the artistic eye and abilities of the twins are undeniable, and the costumes are of an extremely high standard, I think this presentation more than that of any of its contemporaries can be called couture mas, that these costumes are well crafted is an understatement.

Saraswati River.
With all the strengths of this debut presentation, from the powerful message of spiritual redemption and self knowledge to its metaphorical aquatic theme, to the decorated body suits and beautifully pleated leggings there is but one chink in this bands proverbial armour.

Looking at the mas I can’t stop thinking designers drew too much from the pools of high fashion.
In their brave rejection of the repetition and mediocrity that is popular 21st century fantasy mas, and producing this fresh, bold, and daring contemporary work, my opinion is that the fashion has overpowered the spirit of the mas, there is rigidity in fashion that is reflected in these costumes, and this rigidity counters the fluidity of both water and consciousness.

It was almost too easy for me to identify the pools of influence, that were used in each section, and while there is nothing wrong in drawing from these pools of influence, drawing a little too much can upset the balance, and the Norman twins  have drawn form some of fashions most iconic images.
While I respect that they are not trying to be anything like the legends that have preceded them I do find that it’s always good to take notes from the greats.

Ncome River.
“... you put just enough for the audience to do the rest of the work, if your too obvious with it you leave them bored...”Peter Minshall on designing the hummingbird. (See Masman)

In 2006 I called Tribe the Leaders of the NewSchool in Trinidad and Tobago Carnival,back then I saw their approach as new and innovative. Today I pass this title to K2K,this band is as fresh as a breeze coming in from the Caribbean Sea, like I said on Face book it’s a shot in the arm that T&T’s Carnival desperately needed. I do hope that this band is seen as a challenge to the rest of the mas fraternity to be brave and challenge the now old tired order that mindless fantasy mas has become.







I truly hope to see K2K on the road for 2012 and many years to come.
If you want to see more of this band  see the website. 


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