I love textiles, mixing pattern, color, beautiful tailoring- it is no wonder that designer DURO OLOWU has captured my attention and imagination. His brilliant mix of all the above makes him one of the most uniquely creative designers today. I think of him as the independent filmmaker-no fitting a collection into a capsule and loading it up with whatever everyone else is got going, DURO is one of those ORIGINALS. I highlighted his Fall 2010 Collection and said; All work of fashion designer DURO OLOWU is captivating, it is an artist inhabiting his craft at its highest. Afterward, I found out DURO and his assistant were reading along here at little augury. I'm so glad DURO consented to answer some questions and allow me to give his design philosophy the little augury slant with this interview.
Thanks Duro!
You've said-
“My job is not about dictating to women what they should wear, it's about presenting them with beautiful options.”
When I look over your last four collections there is a continuum. I love the sense of extending a wardrobe from season to season-Your clothes feel like ART-Your clients are collecting. Do you agree?"
DO: It's funny you mention this because many women I meet at trunk shows etc tell me they 'collect' as opposed to buy my clothes.
DURO OLOWU's photograph by Zete Marton courtesy of Duro Olowu
ALL Spring and Summer 2011 Collection photos by Hermano Silva - courtesy of Duro Olowu
DO:Its rather interesting because when I am working I don't see the clothes as art. I work on making each garment functional and practical . Of course there is the fantastical/artistic element to many of the styles where I play with various fabrics and techniques as well as colour, applique etc.
I suppose my aesthetic is what makes some people see the pieces as more than just clothes but also as visually stimulating pieces.
What or Who is inspiring you Now?
DO:Women I see everyday and everywhere, regardless of age. That innate sense of elegance , sensuality and grace that you find in certain women whether you are on a street in London, Lagos , Rome, New york or Paris is terribly inspiring.
photograph by Hermano Silva - courtesy of Duro Olowu
DO: I also like the fact that younger women have adopted a less obviously sexy style of dressing which is still flirtatious but intelligent and strong. More mysterious and alluring.
Of course textiles, art and music always make me play more with my ideas.
The photographs of Roy Decarava, Erwin Blumenfeld and J D Ojeikere;
(pictured from l to r, & below respectively)
paintings by Mark Bradford and Alice Neel and Hurvin Anderson
Mark Bradford here
Alice Neel Elenka, 1936
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Richard Neel and Harltey S. Neel Image
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art
about Hurvin Anderson here
image from here
Furniture and objects by Maria Pergay.
What movie could you watch over and over again for inspiration? You mention Romy Schneider in a Vogue video-Seriously gorgeous and marvelous on film.
Who else in celluloid has influenced your design sense?
Mbissine Therese Diop in Ousamanne Sembene's "Black Girl"
(DURO OLOWU from the Spring Collection 2011)
Spring Summer 2011 image from style.com
Romy Schneider in "Innocents with dirty hands"
( from DURO OLOWU FALL 2007 )
images from style.com
&
Abbey Lincoln in " The Trouble with Ivy"
Diana Ross in "Lady Sings the Blues"
Gena Rowland in "Gloria" and "Opening night, " Two weeks in Another Town" with Kirk Douglas and Cyd Charisse ( it was the follow up to the movie "The Bad and the Beautiful")
Stephane Audran in "La Femme Infidele"
Ruby Dee in "Raisin in the Sun"
Tilda Swinton in "Orlando"
Luchino Visconti's "Rocco and his brothers"
(DURO OLOWU from Fall 2009)
images from style.com
I can certainly see my Netflix queue expanding. Music also plays a part in your inspiration too. What were you listening when the Spring 2011 collection was being conceived ?
DO:Fela Kuti ( as always), Marian Anderson, Joao Gilberto, Peggy Lee , Janelle Monae , the John Adams soundtrack to the film "I am Love" and Donny Hathaway.
Your clothes are spirited, but there is a serious element to them as well. Who shaped your design aesthetic?
DO: So many people and places from my earliest childhood days until now have and continue to influence my aesthetic. I don't feel you can develop and maintain a strong aesthetic without somehow taking all of the circumstances of your life, both past and present, and making them relevant to the future.
(from DURO OLOWU Spring 2010)
images from style.com
(DO)You really don't quite know where you are going when designing a collection until you can put your finger on where you are coming from. So for instance, my fabrics are designed usually referencing my memories of prints and colors worn by people around me while growing up as well as the interiors of cultures and places I know well or am eager to discover.
(DURO OLOWU Fall 2009 style.com)
On that note, Do your homes reflect the same fusion of styles your designs do?
DO:In many ways yes. London much more so because I have lived here for a while tend to move things back and forth between my studio and our home. So furniture, fabrics, books and objects are very present in the flat because I have a tendency to "find" things". In New York we have a much larger space in Harlem and my wife usually gets the chance to edit things before they get past the doorman which really helps keep me in check !
I know you have named Yves Saint Laurent as a designer you most admire, Why?
DO:When I was growing up women really wore YSL rive gauche. It was accessible yet desirable ,not just an expensive bourgeois pret a porter label. It was also very well made. Women wore it because they were attracted to his vision and felt the clothes were designed with them in mind, to help them feel beautiful and independent. And his sense of colour was masterful and free. He was also, perhaps along with Paco Rabanne, one of the first designers to use many black and asian models in high fashion both on runway and in editorial .
YSL & muses, and Saint Laurent rive gauche ads featuring IMAN
(DO)The world of international chic he captured has always been very inspiring and important to me. Each time I see someone in vintage YSL they carry the same aura.
(DO)I feel that is part of my job as a designer; to try and create recognizable collections that people will find alluring. It confirmed what I have always felt about life, fashion and inspiration.
"Beauty and style come from everywhere and travel well ."
DURO OLOWU
Personally, you must want to dress creatively. I see some Men's Wear in you Spring collection, are they unisex? I would totally wear those great shirts. Is there more of that to come in the next collection? What labels do you wear?
DO:One tries to dress creatively but it is getting more and more difficult. I don't really buy known labels as much as I did a few years ago because many have started to make clothes that are too of a season. Once you hit 40 you want to look interesting but smart. So I tend to mix up my older Margiela clothes with suits I have made and my own label shirts or with those from Huntsman , J Crew or Harvie and Hudson. When I am in Lagos I also wear my traditional yoruba top and pants (buba and sokoto) made by my fathers tailor in guinea brocade, ankara or dutch wax fabrics . I have also have started wearing Bass Weejuns and Sebago loafers again because they are super chic and super comfortable on any continent, with or without socks.
I love color, You love color! Do women really crave it and aren't they a little afraid of it?
S/S 2011 Collection
images from style.com
DO:Women embrace color if it is presented in a natural way. Even the most vibrant clashes of color or juxtaposition of print needs to be flattering and light to be able to wear it with confidence. And this is the thing - Confidence. It's really what makes the hues come alive. It helps to have an emotional connection with color and print.
CONFIDENCE
Michelle Obama wearing DURO OLOWU
DO:I start with a design that generally sends me off in a particular direction. For SS/2011 I was really looking for ways to evoke a feeling of clarity and confidence for the kind of woman that wears my clothes. An old magazine with a cover by Penn I found in Portobello market featuring an assemblage of sunglasses somehow inspired the more graphic spectacles print I designed for next season. A sort of National Geographic take on crisp urban chic .
That idea of "urban chic" pervades this collection. You are showing black. Why do you think so many women "fall back" on wearing black? That said-the black suit in your Spring collection is one of my two or three favorites- very chic.
Spring and Summer 2011 Collection photos by Hermano Silva - courtesy of Duro Olowu
DO:Black is a safe option for women. I think it looks very good in the summer, especially on sharply tailored pieces ( like the silk shantung peplum jacket, swing skirt and cropped trousers in my spring collection) accessorized with statement jewellery or accessories. But the predominance of black over the last few years may have been a reflection of a state of mind in the world. Perhaps a fear of emotion and passion.
DO:Things have changed a lot now and colour and print have come to the fore in a very interesting way. Before women waited to go on holiday to somewhere hot to wear prints and colour as an escape. Now Rain or shine, summer or fall , you see women in print and colour a lot in North Armerica and Europe because they need the same sense of joie de vivre regardless of where they are.
The heritage and authenticity of your brand is evident, what is next for DURO OLOWU?
DO:I am very excited about my Masons Yard boutique in London's St James's which is going very well so am looking to perhaps opening a similar space in New York soon. Also developing the menswear collection and my furnishing textiles as well as a small collection of handbags. I would also like to collaborate more with certain artists whose work I admire like Juergen Teller with whom I worked as fashion director on two projects for TANK magazine and SELF SERVICE magazine.
"It's a choice for immediate, fleeting success or long-lasting work and success. And I chose the second"
DURO OLOWU
DURO OLOWU
links:
DURO OLOWU here
NY Mag Mark Bradford here
NYTimes Roy DeCarava here
Erwin Blumenfeld here
JD Ojeikere here
Duro's Spring 2011 Collection at style.com here
Video with Duro at Vogue here
DURO at Vogue on Abraham fabrics here
videos:
& To watch more, visit london fashion week
.