Mame Kurogouchi Spring Summer 2023 “Bamboo Groove” at Paris Fashion Week      

Mame Kurogouchi 2023 Spring Summer collection finds inspiration in the extensive history and culture surrounding traditional bamboo  baskets, an item which has become an intimate part of everyday Japanese living. The collection explores the varied weaving techniques developed throughout the evolution of bamboo baskets as well as the equilibrium within the bamboo itself of tranquillity, force, and tension.

Split, weave, collect. A constant cycle. Air visualised. Body flowing.   

Bamboo baskets have been developed through the interweaving of the material properties, decorativeness, and usefulness of the bamboo itself.  Captivated by the beauty the basket itself holds, delicate weaving and the space created within or “ma” in Japanese, the designer Maiko  Kurogouchi gradually discovered the harmony between the basket and flowers within can also be found in the relationship between wearer and their dress, by which an image of contemporary woman – the contradictory nature of strength and flexibility coexist in harmony – is woven.   

Throughout the multitude of artists and creations discovered, Kurogouchi was strongly drawn into the life and works of Iizuka Rōkansai  (1890-1958). Iizuka’s reimagining of the mingu, an item which was developed as an everyday tool, with highly sophisticated techniques  rewrote the code of bamboo crafts of the era. “I marvel at Rōkansai’s ability of conceiving new forms based on tradition while at the same  time pushing the boundaries of it with his individual ability and delicate attention to daily life” Kurogouchi suggests.

Rōkansai’s signature  techniques such as bundled-plait is reinterpreted extensively throughout the knitwear items, and the rhythm of the delicate weaving blended  with the groove of daring curves and bold spacing of this style reverberate the basso continuo of the entire collection.    

The brand’s signature embroidery and jacquard expressing a bamboo forest are combined with a luxurious sheerness in lightweight willow  silk jacquard and silk organdy pieces to convey the dignified beauty of bamboo as if the wearer is enveloped in the wind blowing through the  forest. Bamboo beads, first created in Oita, Japan prior to WWII, have been reproduced in a gradient dye specifically for the collection. The  beads were then woven into unique macrame dress, vest, and skirt. Cord embroidery, an iconic staple of Mame Kurogouchi, arrives to its most  delicate expression to-date; crafted in a structured silhouette with a fine cord recalling the shape of the bamboo baskets.

A “Sakiori” rag-weave  jacket crafted using an assortment of fabrics with a rounded, three dimensional silhouette features unique ceramic toggle buttons hand-made  by Kurogouchi in collaboration with artist Ryohei Yamamoto and Yuki Hirakura, a mastermind behind Komononari Kiln in Arita. This ardent  devotion to detail can be seen in each and every item within the collection of Spring Summer 2023. Piping finish on pockets invoke thoughts of basket rims while  threads dyed uneven are woven to create a pattern reminiscent of the most classic of bamboo basket weaves, mutsume-ami, in a silk cotton  jacquard pieces, elevating the pattern beyond that of the original basket weave expression.    

Mame Kurogouchi Spring Summer 2023, The colour palette centres around natural tones; a mint green evoking thoughts of the freshness of the bamboo forest while the natural gradation  of bamboo in the home long scorched by the smoke of the sunken earth fireplace is skilfully expressed through the traditional arimatsu-shibori  dyeing technique.

Tucked trousers and a vest reminiscent of kimono styling present a modern beauty through the earthly colour of undyed  organic brown cotton in a dobby weave.   

Both directly and indirectly, the inspiration of the bamboo baskets can be felt: bamboo is smoked and woven in the bundled-plait technique  to create a feather-light necklace, earring, and earcuff; bamboo beads are woven with macrame cords embellishing a Kijima Takayuki  collaborative hat – all made by hands of artisans.

In addition to kitten heel pumps and sandals charmed with impactful decorative weaving,  Zori, Japanese traditional sandals, are subtly updated in collaboration with Hakimono Sekizuka. A strap, handmade applying traditional  techniques, combined with the lightweight sole represents the timeless strength and modernity the collection embraces.

All images courtesy of Mame Kurogouchi

PR Agency PR Consulting Paris

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