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장 폴 고티에 무용의상의 조형성에 관한 연구A Study on the Aesthetic Characteristics of the Dance Costume of Jean Paul Gaultier

Other Titles
A Study on the Aesthetic Characteristics of the Dance Costume of Jean Paul Gaultier
Authors
한경하금기숙
Issue Date
2010
Publisher
한국복식학회
Keywords
cross over(크로스 오버); dance costume(무용의상); nouvelle danse(누벨 당스)
Citation
복식, v.60, no.9, pp.1 - 15
Journal Title
복식
Volume
60
Number
9
Start Page
1
End Page
15
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hongik/handle/2020.sw.hongik/21095
ISSN
1229-6880
Abstract
Fashion designer Jean Paul Gaultier incorporated his own boundless and unique artistic into his design of dance costumes, presenting an unobstructed imaginary world that was filled with freedom, which is no less than one would expect from the one-time enfant térrible of Paris fashion. This creativity of Gaultier was made possible only through the fantastic partnership he formed with the French modern dancer, Régine Chopinot. Gaultier and Chopinot shared a deep-rooted sympathy that enabled their own artistic worlds to fully mingle and cross over, resulting in a doubled synergy of their talent and their fame. This study analyzed 11 dancing costumes created through the collaborated efforts of those two enfants térribles, one from the fashion industry and the other from the world of dance. The following are the results of my analysis. Gaultier's dance costumes served as a artistic venue for experimenting with a number of creative inspirations lurking in his mind, which were sometimes expressed in prêt-à-porter collections. Instead of the decorative and expressive features of conventional dance costumes, his was the revival of the dancer’s persona as a human being, ablaze with individuality and uniqueness. He pointed out that there is no good in the distorted turturro's fixed point of view,and the great joy of an opposing way of thinking that overturned the established. Leotard material was used as a second skin by transforming it into various styles and delivering his message. In addition, obscene and sexual expressions were delivered in a direct narrative. His eccentric ideas provided entertainment while showing his oppositional way of thinking. In the dance, the effect of the costumes was doubled by the use of cumbersome and exaggerated accessories, which is generally forbidden in modern dance.
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College of Fine Arts > Department of Textile Art and Fashion Design > 1. Journal Articles

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