To See or Be Seen at Kiko Kostadinov
What does it mean to see and be seen? Existential questions of fashion permeated twin sisters Laura and Deanna Fanning’s Kiko Kostadinov show. To frame the narrative, they transformed the show space at the Conservatoire Nationale des Arts et Métiers into an aviary of sorts: the runway was demarcated by an Oscar Tuazon nestbox sculpture; an avian musicality flickered through the speakers. From their vantage, the Fannings circled around The Brothers Grimm’s Fitcher’s Bird and Cindy Sherman’s 1992 photographic essay of the same name as suitable conduits to explore the question. But they also borrowed from personal experience: their morning commute to the office is through a park where birdwatchers are stationed from early morning and joggers gallop in utility gear. They’re not known to be a fashionable bunch but it’s hard to look away.
The twins opened an inquiry into how garments support the act of looking. They landed on utility trousers with hidden pocket jackets with spaces for notebooks, pens, and binoculars to foster a sense of introspection; double-layer knits create intrigue, and multicolored knitted intarsia coats resemble plumage. Ditto the acetate-washed cotton and iridescent dresses that evoked rainy days. Crocheted bags imitated bird feeders, contrasting with the maturity of elevated tailoring. Modular styles like leggings-jumpsuits and tops that can be sported numerous ways recalled a runners costume. On the collaboration front, there was plenty as usual: Oakley’s Prizm lenses were printed with bucolic scenes; an ongoing collaboration with ASICS reimagines the tabi in a hybridised brogue-cum-trail shoe; a new fine jewelry capsule with Patcharavipa on egg-shaped pendants in sterling silver, with one style featuring a quote from Sylvia Plath’s poem Pheasant.
“There’s this tension between creating characters that were the watched and the watchers,” said Laura backstage, after the show, accompanied by her twin sister, Deanna.