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Old 08-05-2005   #1
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Julian Roberts Productions (Nothing Nothing etc)

Quote:
nothing nothing launched in September 1998 by staging a non-event.
Quote:

The 'invitation-only' concept was used to invite VIP buyers and press to a pretend fashion show.

The date and time on the invite was chosen to clash exactly with that of Alexander McQueen's ss1999 show.

No venue was specified on the invitation.





nothing nothing staged its second 'non-event' in February 1999.

Again VIP buyers and press were invited to attend a pretend fashion show,

but this time the venue was described at length in cryptic detail.

However, no date or time was specified on the invitation.







The label consisted of Julian Roberts and Sophie Cheung



 

Old 08-05-2005   #2
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Spring/Summer 2000 show

 
Old 08-05-2005   #3
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Full biography here : http://www.blowpr.co.uk/JULIANandSOP.../biography.htm
 

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Old 08-05-2005   #4
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a/w 2000


 
Old 08-05-2005   #5
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S/S 2001



 
Old 08-05-2005   #6
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A/W 2001

 

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Old 08-05-2005   #7
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S/S 2002









Last edited by cerfas : 08-05-2005 at 09:55 PM.
 
Old 08-05-2005   #8
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A/W 2002




Last edited by cerfas : 08-05-2005 at 09:52 PM.
 
Old 08-05-2005   #9
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A/W 2002 cont'd



 

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Old 08-05-2005   #10
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Look book S/S 2002


 
Old 08-05-2005   #11
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Photographs from S/S 2002 by masoud:





London fashion week show SS 02:
 
Old 08-05-2005   #12
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S/S 2001: the grey area


 

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Old 08-05-2005   #13
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They sold nothing nothing on eBay for one pound :

Quote:
nothing nothing - fashion label for sale.

includes:

1) all surviving nothing nothing garment patterns, and rights to use: spring-summer 1999 to spring-summer 2003
2) all existing nothing nothing garment labels, and rights to use
3) UK Trademark ownership (partial assignment / right of use for: nothing nothing)
4) website address ownership (transfer / right of use for: nothing nothing.com. & nothing nothing.co.uk)

to view the nothing nothing collection archive please click here
....
Sale begins: 30th November 2002 by auction (no reserve bid), for 10 days
Why?:
nothing nothing began from a bedroom in my mum and dads house in Worthing, in 1998.
Back then i didn't have enough money to show my work to press and buyers, so i started sending out fashion show invites to non-existent events.
Everybody loves to receive an invitation.

At the time, it seemed all fashion designers followed the same path to success: they were all showing 'something', and obsessed with presentation.
It was as if creative objects were totally irrelevant until someone else accepted them: That they gained their relevance only from being seen by the outside world.
But i design clothes nervously under such scrutiny.
Am i too arty, or am i too commercial ?
Who is it im talking to, and do i actually have anything to say ?
And even if i do have something to say, can i really be sure anyone is listening, and will understand ?
Reticence provides escape.
It wasn't that i was disinterested in the 'here & now' i saw pictures of in i-D and Dazed&Confused.
I was interested in the idea of 'concurrence':
that i was doing something creatively experimental at 'exactly the same moment in time as the most important fashion designers in the world'.
It's just that nobody knew or cared, because i didn't show anything.
Showing 'nothing' seemed the right and proper place to begin.

To cut a long story short, since then nothing nothing has shown 6 times at London Fashion Week, and a further 14 times around the world, in such places as France, Scotland, Japan, Hong Kong, America, Iceland, Russia, Switzerland, and Korea. Its received the New Generation Award from the British Fashion Council 3 times, and has been featured in Vogue, Elle, i-D, Tank, Dutch, Surface, The Telegraph, The Times, The Guardian, The Evening Standard, The International Herald & Tribune, and many more fashion magazines, television programs and newspapers worldwide. The label has retailed in Japan, Hong Kong and London.

Despite all this effort and achievement, nothing nothing has never been a financial success, and the support from the buyers and editors has been transitory.
There is now apparently 'so much of everything' and so short an attention span, that nothing nothing simply became part of the new and ever growing 'fashion entertainment industry':
its collections became a performance for the amusement or upset of audiences taking time-out between proper fashion shows.

More money was spent presenting nothing nothing products to the invited press & buyers than was actually made selling them,
and so it is true to say that nothing nothing has not profited at-all from either being seen, presented, or sold.
Loss has become a central aspect of its business objective:
nothing nothing has been 'buying high and selling low' from day one.

I was watching television the other night and heard Rachel Newsome from Dazed&Confused going on about how there's no longer such a thing as the 'underground'.
Everything apparently has been absorbed into the mainstream.
London Fashion Week, Popstars:The Rivals, Fame Academy, Model Behavior, the Turner Arts Prize, and the Mercury Music Award.
This week i entered the New Generation Award for Fashion.
Flicking backwards and forwards with the remote control, all these things become mixed up together in my head into a blur of contests:
A place where real 'success' is awarded by a panel of industry experts, or an armchair audiences.
A spectator sport where the seating arrangements seem as important to the audience as the products of creativity on show.
So this sale is my knee-jerk reaction.

The media tries to obliterate everything outside its focus.
Are creative people really to believe that there is so much diversity of style in the media, that the whole world is represented by magazines and television ?
Like the Discovery space capsule, can you really deduce the whole world from the total sum of their contents ?
And is it really the best and most creative work that we see, ready-selected for view in the most fashionable magazines, galleries and boutiques ?
Or is there infact another view, another way of appreciating creativity ?

I believe that you have to allow for the possibility that the most creatively important work of our time is currently in the process of being developed in studios, and has not yet emerged.
I believe that you must also allow for the certainty that many of the most creatively interesting products already 'out there', are shut away from view and hoarded by collectors, libraries and museums: over-protected and lost within the fanaticism of a collection.
I also believe that you have to ask the question: Is that which gets made necessarily more creative than that which does not ? and,
Are the things which get commissioned and marketed more creatively challenging than the products which only became prototypes, plans, scripts, and mad dreams, or which became lost on hard-drives or night buses ?
Perhaps the most vital creative ideas only ever existed in memory, having evaporated in the act of their performance, growing more elaborate through myth and the passing of time ?
You have to allow for the possibilities.
You have to know that there is so much more 'underground' than there can ever be 'mainstream'.

I have always been protective of the enjoyment i gain from making things: The process of technique and the activity of invention.
As a teacher, i hate the opinion that there is nothing left to discover.
That everything new must emulate something passed, and be mediated to the audience in 'themes', 'scenes' and 'styles' for easier consumption.
Fashion editors, stylists and marketers seem to have exhausted their own childhood nostalgia through their relentless plundering of fashions history,
and now confronting the present for the first time have decided that there is nothing left to discover.
That everything is already here at our fingertips ready to be reworked: That anything new will be instantly recognizable as a synthesis of everything we have ever seen.
They seem to have completely lost interest in finding and seeking out new things.
Their understanding of the new is to seek out the characteristics they find familiar and comfortable with:
what scene the new is part of, and what style or decade it suggests by comparison.

Not everything gets absorbed by the mainstream:
only if you believe the whole world is represented in media, or that the whole world actually IS the media, that creativity IS a television programme, IS a magazine, could this be true.
A great deal of creativity is not seen, or is not visible.
It is an act, or an activity.
It is a sketchbook, plan, pattern, work in progress, a series of unedited rushes, and half-finished toiles:
and it's all happening and unfolding right now in studios and colleges, behind closed doors in a place called the REAL WORLD.

I'm sending nothing nothing off into the unknown.
I'm taking it out of circulation, to be hoarded or collected or transformed.
I'm closing the loop, taking it all back underground, selling out at a price everyone can afford:
yours for a quid,
take it or leave it.
 
Old 08-05-2005   #14
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S/S 2002




NOTE: THIS GARMENT HAS BEEN RE-DESIGNED AT THE REQUEST OF THE SUBJECT
 
Old 08-05-2005   #15
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