
Journal
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LUCIAN FREUD
« from borrowed suits to bespoke tailoring, Freud’s fashion choices evolved with his art »
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DAVID LYNCH
« The oddest of Americans, the most American of oddballs, Lynch was a man with a uniform. »
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THE GRAPHIC T-SHIRT
« from a history that does not follow fashion but the needs for expression to being a part of collective conscious and an underground culture »
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FOUCAULT / TURTLENECK
« though the black turtleneck was serving as a symbol of irreverence and rebellion in 1950s, Foucault’s rebellious spirit manifested in choosing a cream-coloured version »
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GLENN GOULD
« virtuoso, recluse, germaphobe, Glenn Gould is a style icon, copied everywhere, equalled nowhere. »
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GILLES DELEUZE
« He adopts an accessory that will leave him a nickname: ‘the philosopher with the hat’ »
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DALE COOPER
« Against the brown of Washington state, Cooper stands out in his stark black suit-white shirt »
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COOPER X 12
« Dressed up like a million-dollar trouper/Tryin’ hard to look like Gary Cooper/Super Duper - Puttin’ on the Ritz »
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STRIPES: PIN, PENCIL, CHALK, AND ROPE
« A variety of the ‘pinstripe’ often found in shirt cloth but rarely in suit cloth is the ‘pencil stripe’ »
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THE MEN OF JEAN-LUC GODARD
« the aesthetics described as “French Mod”: extensive collars on structured shirts, a bit of flair here and a touch of paisley there. »
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A CHEQUERED PAST : LIVES OF THE ARTISTS, LIVES OF THE FRIENDS
« to witness and understand the era of 1960s & 1970s, which describes the status of the photographic subject as the intersection o four men »