Post Your Map :: We will regularly present a featured artist, writer or performer who is exploring questions of identity and personal narrative through their medium of expression.
The map is your representation. No rigid lines, no defined routes. You direct it on your own account.
“The street artist known as Princess Hijab is, as she puts it, hijabizing ads in Paris. She’s drawing the Islamic head cover onto immodestly dressed models in public advertisements and billboards. Why? It’s unclear. She has a manifesto, written in the third person, on her website, but it’s oddly-punctuated and generally baffling.”
Post Your Map :: We will regularly present a featured artist, writer or performer who is exploring questions of identity and personal narrative through their medium of expression.
The map is your representation. No rigid lines, no defined routes. You direct it on your own account.
Post Your Map :: We will regularly present a featured artist, writer or performer who is exploring questions of identity and personal narrative through their medium of expression.
The map is your representation. No rigid lines, no defined routes. You direct it on your own account.
Lumped together, Autumn/Winter 2010 is readily told by the cast of London Fashion Week: who to wear, what to wear, and how to wear it - but who’s doing the telling? Adjacent to the utra-high fashion set in West-Central London’s setting of LFW headquarters at Sommerset House is an opening for amateur and Do-It-Yourself status budding designers. The “Untold” is a collective for designers and creatives that have limited access to entering the competitive world of high-fashion. This is a story that’s universal for any aspring fashion designer, but the Untold collaboration focuses on designers with backgrounds that classify them as “underprivileged.” It may lean the story in one direction, but it also makes it more interesting.