Young Russian fashion designers take inspiration from history
In her workshop in a Moscow attic, Maria
Andrianova is using a sewing technique she learnt from elderly women in the
forested Karelia region of northwestern Russia.
“For me, sewing is a way to learn about my origins,” said the 31-year-old
designer.
She describes her “Masha Andrianova” fashion line as “for the modern world”
but uses some sewing techniques dating back to the Tsarist era.
Her flowing dresses, high-necked blouses and pleated skirts are made of
natural materials in pale or autumnal colours.
“In Karelia, the locals showed me a way of sewing that I didn’t know about.
They had learned it from their mothers, it was like a family secret,” she
said, lightly braiding two threads together.
More and more young Russian fashion designers like Andrianova are finding
inspiration in traditional sewing methods that have fallen into disuse, seeing
them as a way to stand out from the Western brands that poured into the
country after the fall of the USSR.
“We don’t want to look any more at what the others are doing in the West,”
she said.
“We want to find our own methods, because we also have many traditions and
a very rich culture.”
Learning about such traditions could be a way for young Russians to explore
further back into their country’s past than the relatively familiar Bolshevik
revolution, she said.
Andrianova has taken inspiration from sketches by an ancestor who owned a
weaving factory as well as from the life story of her great-grandmother, who
headed a dressmaking business. She also learnt techniques from her
grandmother, who was born in the Soviet era.
“But I’m not restoring period clothing,” she said. “I’m creating modern
clothes that carry Russian history in them.”
‘Natural process’
At 35, Yukhann Nikadimus decided to devote himself entirely to making
kokoshniki — traditional women’s high headdresses that were particularly
popular in the 19th century.
Working in a factory that dates back to the 16th century but was renamed
after Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin in the Soviet era, the tall bearded man
carefully embroiders pearl patterns on to canvas stretched on a wooden frame.
While he gets his ideas from period photographs, he insists that his
kokoshniki can work in any contemporary wardrobe.
“You could wear a kokoshnik with a modern wedding dress, for example,” he
said.
“National dress shouldn’t be something that is fixed,” he insists. “It
changes all the time — new techniques appear, you have to incorporate them,
it’s a natural process.”
‘Time of introspection’
For cultural commentator Ilya Oskolkov-Tsentsiper, founder of Moscow’s
Strelka design institute, such a revival of interest in pre-revolutionary
dress among young designers was “almost inevitable.”
“During Perestroika (in the 1980s) and the following decades, Russians were
fascinated by the West and everything that came from there,” he said.
“Back then we underestimated the value of what we had (in Russia) and
overestimated the beauty of everything outside.”
“Now though we are living in a time of introspection, we are trying to
figure out who we are, what shapes our identity and what makes us unique.
“This isn’t just about fashion — it goes a lot deeper. It is connected to
design, music and film. It goes beyond politics.”
In the city of Ivanovo, Russia’s centre for textile production, 28-year-old
Maxim Krylov wants to help young designers learn about their heritage.
He has founded an annual festival called Textile Capital in the town, 300
kilometres (186 miles) northeast of Moscow, aimed at encouraging designers to
use traditional fabrics.
“This is our duty,” he said.
“We want to preserve this heritage to be an inspiration for Russian design,
to show the globalised industry that we have our own world, a world that’s
Russian and local.”
In July, some designers worked with fabrics printed with Soviet propaganda
designs found in the archives of Ivanovo factories, Krylov said.
Wearing such clothes does not mean looking old fashioned.
Vasilina Kharlamova, a 29-year-old from Moscow, says she likes clothes that
are “linked to (Russian) culture” and has just ordered a dress from Maria
Andrianova that she plans “to wear with sneakers in everyday life.”
Such clothes are not to everyone’s taste, she admits, however.
“You have to learn to love these clothes and understand… the past.”(AFP)