The Rise of the Stylist: Subculture, Style and the Fashion Image in London 19801990
By (Author) Dr Philip Clarke
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
25th July 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Cultural studies: dress and society
History of design
Social and cultural history
746.920942109048
Hardback
168
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The Rise of the Stylist examines the social factors that contributed to the stylist becoming a key role in fashion image-making. The 1980s' stylist is presented as a cultural intermediary and auteur, as commercial compass and avant-garde innovator. Focusing on London from 1980 to 1990, Philip Clarke draws on oral history interviews with the young creatives who were involved in the specific subcultural scenes, educational environments and new modes of publishing that informed a unique moment in British cultural life. By documenting the history of the stylist in fashion and dress, as well as their contribution to fields such as food photography and car manufacture, this study looks beyond the style press and bridges the gap between production and promotion. The Rise of the Stylist defines the specific nature of the stylists role in relation to that of other creative occupations and locates discussion of styling within the context of postmodern society, where political shifts, technological developments and changing attitudes in all fields of cultural production are reflected in the manufacture and dissemination of fashion.
The fresh immediacy of this work captures and reproduces the energy and liveliness of the stylists who contributed to 1980s fashion design. Weaving together the voices of stylists themselves with detailed political, social and cultural analysis, this work is a must for anyone interested in 80s street fashion, subculture, clubbing, representation and image politics. -- Peter McNeil, Distinguished Professor, University of Technology Sydney, Australia
Philip Clarke is course leader of the Fashion Communication pathways at Central Saint Martins, London, UK. His teaching and research interests centre on visual communication and image-making in the field of fashion, focusing on the role of the stylist. Philip has authored chapters in Architecture Filmmaking (2020) eds. Troiani & Campbell, and Fashion Stylists: History, Meaning and Practice (Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2020) ed. Lynge-Jorln.