Mere clothing is transformed into desirable fashion by the way it is represented in imagery. Fashion's Double examines how meanings are projected onto garments through their representation, whether in painting, photography, cinema or online fashion film, conveying identity and status, eliciting fascination and desire.
With in-depth case studies including the work of Nick Knight and Helmut Newton, film examples such as The Hunger Games, music video Girl Panic by Duran Duran, and much more, this book analyses the interrelationship between clothing, identity, embodiment, representation and self-representation.
Written for students and scholars alike, Fashion's Double will appeal to anyone studying fashion, cultural studies, art theory and history, photography, sociology, and film.
Adam Geczy is an artist and writer who teaches at Sydney College of the Arts at the University of Sydney, Australia.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Painting Fashion
2. The Model Image: From Illustration to Photograph
3. The Little Black Dress and Capital Couture
4. Perverse Utopias: Helmut Newton
5. Music Video, Pornochic and Retro-Elegance
6. Fashion Film, or The Disappearing Catwalk
7. Conclusion: Conditions of Imposibility
Bibliography
Index