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  • Masterclass for the Dutch fashion sector by Atelier Néerlandais: “Paris is still the place to be for designers”

    Network meeting at Atelier Néerlandais (photo: Atelier Néerlandais)
     
    Click to see photo caption

    Masterclass for the Dutch fashion sector by Atelier Néerlandais: “Paris is still the place to be for designers”

    The Atelier Néerlandais celebrates this June its fifth year anniversary. Time to highlight future ambitions.
    31 May 2019
    By Lisa Grob

     

    Five years ago the Atelier Néerlandais opened its doors in Paris as successor of the Institut Néerlandais. At the time, the closing of the Institut Néerlandais caused a considerable commotion in the Dutch-French cultural and diplomatic world. Thus, although welcomed, the creation of the Atelier was set in turbulent times and opinions and expectations were divided. By now, however, the Atelier has grown into the platform par excellence for the Dutch creative and cultural sector in Paris. For the future, the Atelier Néerlandais has new ambitious plans.  

    Masterclasses in the Netherlands
    One of the new initiatives is Atelier Néerlandais hors les murs. The Atelier wishes to be more active in the Netherlands by organizing masterclasses for the Dutch design and fashion sectors. Last April, the first masterclass was held in Amsterdam specifically for Dutch fashion brands that want to bring their practice to Paris. These masterclasses are meant to give more insight into what is actually important in the French equivalent sectors at the moment, indicate where Dutch organizations could go in the first place, as well as making them ‘market ready’ in general. For many disciplines Paris still forms the steppingstone for an international career. For this first masterclass the Atelier invited 'fashion therapist' Patricia Lerat from Paris. In individual professionalization sessions she advised the Dutch brands on their strategies. 
     

     
    'Fashion therapist' Patricia Lerat at Waag Society in Amsterdam (photo: Carolien van Tilburg)


    The Dutch brands Stoop & Peterson, Bono van Peursem, IRVINX, Saskia ter Welle and Berry Rutjes Jr. signed up for the masterclass of Lerat. Questions that were discussed varied from how do I enter the French market and how to choose the right focus to how to choose the price range for my product and how can my brand grow in a responsible (sustainable) way. During a two-hour-long coaching sessions the participants were provided with tailor-made advice. They were all very pleased with Lerat’s personal approach, and they could implement her advice immediately. 

    Lerat has some general advice for brands that wish to enter the French market as well: “Build a collection that differs in product and image,” she says. A strong image is important to promote your product on social media, but it is also essential to find a so called showroom within Paris. Recently a shift has occurred in the way products are shown during Paris fashion weeks. From the large exhibition locations such as Première Classe, Who’s Next and Tranoï, international buyers nowadays prefer to meet and see brands and designers in small-scale and more intimate showrooms. 

    These showrooms, however, won’t admit you if you don’t have a good (product) story. And it is already hard to find the right one without a local network. Lerat’s most pressing advice is therefore: “Create an event or a party, because buzz is a fashion accelerator. As Paris is still the place to be for designers in terms of visibility and credibility,” she says, "designers need to build a strategy and make choices in their use of tools and events.” 

    From Institut to platform
    The masterclasses serve a second purpose, next to empowering Dutch organisations in their march towards France. The other reason needs some contextualisation. From day one, the Atelier Néerlandais chose to take a different course then the Institut Néerlandais. Where the latter concentrated mainly on presenting Dutch cultural outings, by organizing literary soirées, expositions and performances, the Atelier wanted to become a platform facilitating cooperation and network building between Dutch and French organisations. 

    Carolien van Tilburg, coordinator of the Atelier Néerlandais du premier jour, is satisfied with the achievements of the Atelier so far: “From all the commotion surrounding the closing of the Institut Néerlandais, the team has succeeded in creating a meeting place for the Dutch cultural and creative sector in Paris.” The major change: the setting up of a membership system. For only 150 euros a year, Dutch artists and organisations can become a member of the Atelier. Membership includes usage of the light, white space to work, give presentations to local peers, or organizing network meetings. The low price gives artists and creatives of different sorts a fair chance to explore the French market.

     

                                           
      

    Dutch artist Victor de Bie at work in the Atelier, team Iris van Herpen at work (photos: Atelier Néerlandais) and designs by Iris van Herpen during Paris Fashion Week in June 2018 (photo: Lisa Grob)

     
    Carolien van Tilburg on the balcony of the Atelier Néerlandais (photo: Team Peter Stigter)

    Accessible and open
    With that, the Atelier Néerlandais has become an accessible, open platform and a unique initiative in the diplomatic world. Van Tilburg: “It’s foremost a meeting place, but content always comes first. We give everyone a chance, but it is ‘plug and play’ and it is really to members themselves to seize their opportunities. This is a very new and singular thing within the world of Embassies.”

    However, the members of the Atelier rarely know each other. Considering the fact that members all share one specific interest, which is France, the possibility to meet the other members has been a recurring question. Knowing the other members could contribute to realizing joint projects in France. The masterclasses thus also function as a means to meet the other Dutch members. 

    Sustainability and innovation in the fashion sector
    The Atelier and its members form a sort of Dutch community in Paris. However, the Atelier is definitely not inward-looking, as it searches actively for cooperation opportunities between Dutch and French organisations: “The past five years the Atelier has developed its antenna function to be able to detect developments in France that offer opportunities for the Netherlands. Especially regarding fashiontech and innovative textiles there is a lot of interest,” says Van Tilburg. Whenever possible, members can make use of the Ateliers’network in Paris and France.  

    Amongst members, many are active in the fashion industry. This sector is – worldwide – more and more criticised for its production processes. Innovation in the use of recycled materials, the environmental-friendly colouring of fabrics or the application of (bio)waste as material are generating attention in the Netherlands as well as in France. The two countries are complementary in these domains, according to Van Tilburg.


    Fabrics from organic materials at Biotech:Numerique exhibition (photo: Lisa Grob)

     

    Find an overview of activities and possibilities of the Atelier Néerlandais here. 

     

    Organization: 
    Atelier Néerlandais
  • Maastricht brings fashion to sister city Chengdu

    Maastricht brings fashion to sister city Chengdu

    From 24 March until 23 April, interdisciplinary platform Fashionclash will introduce 'Future of Fashion' in West China.
    20 March 2017

    From 24 March until 23 April, Maastricht-based interdisciplinary platform Fashionclash, jointly with Chinese partners Punch Me, Cross Lab and Dutch-Chinese organization About Asia will introduce Fashionclash 2017: Future of Fashion in Chengdu, China. After a successful first exhibition of Fashionclash in China in 2015, as part of an exchange programme between the sister-cities of Maastricht and Chengdu, the platform now presents a larger, more comprehensive, and complete story at the newly opened Future Center in downtown Chengdu.

    Future of Fashion
    ‘Future of Fashion’ is a multidisciplinary exhibition composed out of work of more than 30 emerging designers and artists from The Netherlands and Flanders. The presented work stands out for its concepts, experimental materials and textiles, innovative shapes and tailoring. In addition to fashion the exhibition features screenings of interdisciplinary fashion films and performances.

    The selection of participants is an eclectic mix of designers that graduated from the top schools such as AMFI, ArtEZ Arnhem, MAFAD, KABK, Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp and Theatre Academy Maastricht. Among the participants there are award winning designers like Marlou Breuls and Nikki Duijst, avant-garde designers’ collective Das Leben Am Haverkamp and promising theatre makers like Lotte Milder and Milou van Duijnhoven.

    In recent years, Dutch fashion practitioners are well presented in China with their cross-boundary experiments and creativity. After the comprehensive exhibition project The Future of Fashion is Now (Shanghai, Shenzhen, 2015-2016), co-organized by DutchCulture and Overseas China Town Group, 'Fashionclash 2017: Future of Fashion" is a new representation of cutting-edge Dutch fashion design in west of China.

    Read more about Flashionclash, it's annual festival in Maastricht and international fashion network.

  • The Netherlands and China to Collaborate More Intensively in the Field of Fashion

    On 28 October 2015, the Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs Bert Koenders opened the exhibition The Future of Fashion is Now in Shanghai.
     
    Click to see photo caption

    The Netherlands and China to Collaborate More Intensively in the Field of Fashion

    The recently opened exhibition in Shanghai, The Future of Fashion Is Now, is the inspiration for a special Chinese-Dutch collaborative effort.
    3 November 2015

    After the opening of the Museum Boijmans van Beuningen exhibition ‘The Future of Fashion is Now’ on 28 October in Shanghai, initiator Han Nefkens announced that a number of Chinese fashion talents are being invited to make new work for this exhibition. In due time, the new Chinese pieces will also be shown in Museum Boijmans van Beuningen in Rotterdam.

    More Dutch-Chinese collaboration
    The Future of Fashion is Now is also leading to other special collaborations. Several Dutch fashion designers accompanied the exhibition to China to exchange expertise with their Chinese colleagues. Immediately after the opening in Shanghai, Donghua University, which has one of China’s most important fashion institutes, signed a declaration of intent with the fashion school of the ArtEZ Institute of the Arts in Arnhem to work together in the area of fashion and innovation. ArtEZ, with famous alumni like Iris van Herpen and Pauline van Dongen, has an international reputation in this respect.

    At the moment, Donghua University is working with the city of Shanghai to create a platform where fashion designers, engineers and scientists can come together to help develop new techniques and manufacturing processes for the fashion industry around Shanghai.

    The Future of Fashion is Now
    Prior to this, the exhibition was presented in 2014 in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam. It was brought to China in connection with the state visit of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima. The Future of Fashion is Now will be on view in Shanghai for the next four months. After that the exhibition will travel to Shenzhen, where it will be shown from 26 March to 31 July 2016 in the Hua Gallery.

    Partners
    The Future of Fashion is Now and the exchange of knowledge between Dutch and Chinese designers and institutes is made possible by the generous support of the Chinese corporate group OCT, the Creative Industries Fund NL and the Dutch Ministry of Education, Cultural Affairs and Science, as well as contributions from Control Union Shanghai, Han Nefkens Fashion on the Edge, Next Fashion, the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts, The Pin Projects, the Dutch Embassy in Beijing and DutchCulture.

    Organization: 
    Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    Location: 
    OCT Contemporary Art Terminal Shanghai
  • Queen Máxima opens The Future of Fashion is Now in Shanghai

    Werk van Ying Gao (China/Canada) en Pauline van Dongen (Nederland) in The Future of Fashion is Now.

    Photo: Ying Gao, Pauline van Dongen
     
    Photo: Ying Gao, Pauline van Dongen

    Queen Máxima opens The Future of Fashion is Now in Shanghai

    The Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen’s successful fashion exhibition is its first ever to be shown in China, thanks to an initiative of DutchCulture.
    20 October 2015

    On 28 October, Queen Máxima of the Netherlands will officially open an exhibition of the work of some 25 International fashion designers during Her Majesty’s state visit to China.

    The Future of Fashion is Now, originally shown in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in the autumn of 2014, presents the fashion of the future as seen by the newest generation of fashion designers. More than 25 young fashion talents from across the world, including eight from China, were invited to submit work. The exhibition also includes designs by respected Dutch innovators like Viktor & Rolf, Iris van Herpen and Pauline van Dongen.

    At the invitation of DutchCulture, Elisa van Joolen, Pauline van Dongen, Imme van der Haak and Antoine Peters are also traveling to China to share their expertise. These designers are actively seeking innovation in the fashion world. Futuristic technologies, sustainable clothing and new manufacturing processes for recycling materials and products are their starting points for designing the fashion of tomorrow. In conjunction with the exhibition, an intercultural programme has been organised, for various fashion schools and designers from the Netherlands and China have been invited to exchange their expertise.

    Chinese designers and the manufacturing industry
    The Future of Fashion is Now will be held from 28 October 2015 through 28 February 2016 at the OCT Contemporary Art Terminal in Shanghai. After 28 February, the exhibition is moving on to the OCT Art & Design Gallery in Shenzhen, where it will be shown from 26 March through 31 July 2016. The chosen locations are well suited for the exhibition’s subject matter. From time immemorial, Shanghai has been the fashion city where designers conduct their business. Around Shenzhen, there are many manufacturing plants that experiment with new technologies.

    Unique Dutch-Chinese collaboration
    This exhibition came about thanks to the several years’ relation between OCT and DutchCulture. OCT is the market leader in the amusement industry and one of China’s top five project developers. This private corporation has its own museums and an art collection. DutchCulture brought Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen and OCT in contact with each other and advised both parties on this collaboration.

    The presentation of the exhibition The Future of Fashion is Now in China has been partly made possible through the generous support of OCT, the Creative Industries Fund NL and the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science. Other parties that have contributed to the realisation of The Future of Fashion is Now in China are: Control Union Shanghai, Han Nefkens Fashion on the Edge Foundation (NL), Next Fashion, Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts (CN), The Pin Projects (CN) and the Dutch Embassy in Beijing.

    UPDATE 27 October
    Queen Maxima is cutting short her state visit to China and will return to the Netherlands to be hospitalized for a kidney infection, the Dutch government announced today.

    Organization: 
    OCT Contemporary Art Terminal Shanghai
    DutchCulture
    Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    Location: 
    OCT Contemporary Art Terminal Shanghai


  • Bengaluru Centre of the National Institute of Fashion Technology in India

    See also: Kakarla Usha (Expert)

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  • Regional centre of the National Institute of Fashion Technology in India 1986 was a turning point for the fashion industry in India. This was the year National Institute of Fashion Technology New Delhi was set up by the Ministry of Textiles, Government of India, in technical collaboration with FIT, New York. NIFT Delhi has produced a number of eminent alumni over the years like Rohit Bal, Ritu Beri, Manish Malhotra.... It offers a variety of Regular as well as CE programs. It has the olders and richest Resource Centre having a rich collections of print and non-print materials. See also: Rakhee Gupta Bhandari (Expert)

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  • National Institute of Fashion Technology was set up in 1986 under the aegis of the Ministry of Textiles, Government of India. It has emerged as the premier Institute of Design, Management and Technology, developing professionals for taking up leadership positions in fashion business in the emerging global scenario. NIFT has been granted statutory status under the act of Parliament of India in 2006, empowering the Institute to award degrees and other academic distinctions. The Institute is a pioneer in envisioning and evolving fashion business education in the country through a network of twelve professionally managed domestic centres at New Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Gandhinagar, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Mumbai, Raebareli, Bhopal, Kannur, Patna and Shillong. NIFT has further spread its wings globally with the opening of an international centre at Mauritius. NIFT has set academic standards and excelled in thought leadership by providing a pool of creative genius and technically competent professionals. The Institute provides a common platform for fashion education, research and training. ==Child Organisations== ====Regional Centres==== * Bengaluru Centre * Bhopal Centre * Bhubaneshwar Centre * Chennai Centre * Gandhinagar Centre * Hyderabad Centre * Jodhpur Centre * Kangra Centre * Kannur Centre * Kolkata Centre * Mumbai Centre * New Delhi Centre * Patna Centre * Raebareli Centre * Shillong Centre ====International Centres==== * Mauritius Centre See also: R.M. Singh (Expert)

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  • Modefabriek is recognised as a procreative and inspiring fashion trade event, proudly based in Amsterdam. Since its founding in 1996, it has evolved into much more. Today, Modefabriek is a mash-up of brand presentations, fashion shows, expos, stores, talks, classes, food & drinks, music – and more.

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  • 1 October 2016 to 8 January 2017

    Exhibition: Three Eyes - Five Young Chinese Designers

    Exhibition Three Eyes Poster
     
    Click to see photo caption

    Exhibition: Three Eyes - Five Young Chinese Designers

    Han Nefkens Foundation commissioned five young Chinese designers to make new works for exhibition The Future of Fashion is Now, shown in Shenzhen.
    1 October 2016 to 8 January 2017

    (source: Museum Boijmans van Beuningen)

    Last year the Han Nefkens Foundation commissioned five young Chinese designers to make new works for this exhibition, shown at the OCT Art & Design Gallery in Shenzhen, as a supplement to the travelling exhibition ‘The Future of Fashion is Now’.

    At the end of last year the well-known Chinese designers Zhang Da, Dooling Jiang and ZucZug drew up a list of current talented Chinese fashion stylists. Initiator Han Nefkens, guest curator José Teunissen and Feng Feng, the artistic director of the OCT Art and Design Gallery in Shenzhen, selected the designers of the new works from a shortlist. Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, in collaboration with Han Nefkens Fashion on the Edge, is showing these new Chinese works in Rotterdam from October onwards. This special joint venture has provided a platform for innovative fashion designers for several years now, creating an opportunity for talented national and international fashion designers to show their work to a wide public.

    The five designers Dido Liu, Fang Ye, Fixxed Studios, Percy Lau, ZAZ share the belief that tradition and the future must go hand in hand. According to Chinese culture, a designer needs three eyes: two to look to the future and one to look back on five thousand years of Chinese culture.

    The exhibition is accompanied by a publication, designed by Glamcult Studio and published by the Han Nefkens Foundation.

    Organization: 
    Han Nefkens
    Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    Location: 
    Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    Discipline: 
    Fashion


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    Merits (2019)

    Events
    5 international activities
    Ranking
    19/641 ranking within discipline
    Awards
    0 international awards
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  • Masterclass for the Dutch fashion sector by Atelier Néerlandais: “Paris is still the place to be for designers”

    Network meeting at Atelier Néerlandais (photo: Atelier Néerlandais)
     
    Click to see photo caption

    Masterclass for the Dutch fashion sector by Atelier Néerlandais: “Paris is still the place to be for designers”

    The Atelier Néerlandais celebrates this June its fifth year anniversary. Time to highlight future ambitions.
    31 May 2019
    By Lisa Grob

     

    Five years ago the Atelier Néerlandais opened its doors in Paris as successor of the Institut Néerlandais. At the time, the closing of the Institut Néerlandais caused a considerable commotion in the Dutch-French cultural and diplomatic world. Thus, although welcomed, the creation of the Atelier was set in turbulent times and opinions and expectations were divided. By now, however, the Atelier has grown into the platform par excellence for the Dutch creative and cultural sector in Paris. For the future, the Atelier Néerlandais has new ambitious plans.  

    Masterclasses in the Netherlands
    One of the new initiatives is Atelier Néerlandais hors les murs. The Atelier wishes to be more active in the Netherlands by organizing masterclasses for the Dutch design and fashion sectors. Last April, the first masterclass was held in Amsterdam specifically for Dutch fashion brands that want to bring their practice to Paris. These masterclasses are meant to give more insight into what is actually important in the French equivalent sectors at the moment, indicate where Dutch organizations could go in the first place, as well as making them ‘market ready’ in general. For many disciplines Paris still forms the steppingstone for an international career. For this first masterclass the Atelier invited 'fashion therapist' Patricia Lerat from Paris. In individual professionalization sessions she advised the Dutch brands on their strategies. 
     

     
    'Fashion therapist' Patricia Lerat at Waag Society in Amsterdam (photo: Carolien van Tilburg)


    The Dutch brands Stoop & Peterson, Bono van Peursem, IRVINX, Saskia ter Welle and Berry Rutjes Jr. signed up for the masterclass of Lerat. Questions that were discussed varied from how do I enter the French market and how to choose the right focus to how to choose the price range for my product and how can my brand grow in a responsible (sustainable) way. During a two-hour-long coaching sessions the participants were provided with tailor-made advice. They were all very pleased with Lerat’s personal approach, and they could implement her advice immediately. 

    Lerat has some general advice for brands that wish to enter the French market as well: “Build a collection that differs in product and image,” she says. A strong image is important to promote your product on social media, but it is also essential to find a so called showroom within Paris. Recently a shift has occurred in the way products are shown during Paris fashion weeks. From the large exhibition locations such as Première Classe, Who’s Next and Tranoï, international buyers nowadays prefer to meet and see brands and designers in small-scale and more intimate showrooms. 

    These showrooms, however, won’t admit you if you don’t have a good (product) story. And it is already hard to find the right one without a local network. Lerat’s most pressing advice is therefore: “Create an event or a party, because buzz is a fashion accelerator. As Paris is still the place to be for designers in terms of visibility and credibility,” she says, "designers need to build a strategy and make choices in their use of tools and events.” 

    From Institut to platform
    The masterclasses serve a second purpose, next to empowering Dutch organisations in their march towards France. The other reason needs some contextualisation. From day one, the Atelier Néerlandais chose to take a different course then the Institut Néerlandais. Where the latter concentrated mainly on presenting Dutch cultural outings, by organizing literary soirées, expositions and performances, the Atelier wanted to become a platform facilitating cooperation and network building between Dutch and French organisations. 

    Carolien van Tilburg, coordinator of the Atelier Néerlandais du premier jour, is satisfied with the achievements of the Atelier so far: “From all the commotion surrounding the closing of the Institut Néerlandais, the team has succeeded in creating a meeting place for the Dutch cultural and creative sector in Paris.” The major change: the setting up of a membership system. For only 150 euros a year, Dutch artists and organisations can become a member of the Atelier. Membership includes usage of the light, white space to work, give presentations to local peers, or organizing network meetings. The low price gives artists and creatives of different sorts a fair chance to explore the French market.

     

                                           
      

    Dutch artist Victor de Bie at work in the Atelier, team Iris van Herpen at work (photos: Atelier Néerlandais) and designs by Iris van Herpen during Paris Fashion Week in June 2018 (photo: Lisa Grob)

     
    Carolien van Tilburg on the balcony of the Atelier Néerlandais (photo: Team Peter Stigter)

    Accessible and open
    With that, the Atelier Néerlandais has become an accessible, open platform and a unique initiative in the diplomatic world. Van Tilburg: “It’s foremost a meeting place, but content always comes first. We give everyone a chance, but it is ‘plug and play’ and it is really to members themselves to seize their opportunities. This is a very new and singular thing within the world of Embassies.”

    However, the members of the Atelier rarely know each other. Considering the fact that members all share one specific interest, which is France, the possibility to meet the other members has been a recurring question. Knowing the other members could contribute to realizing joint projects in France. The masterclasses thus also function as a means to meet the other Dutch members. 

    Sustainability and innovation in the fashion sector
    The Atelier and its members form a sort of Dutch community in Paris. However, the Atelier is definitely not inward-looking, as it searches actively for cooperation opportunities between Dutch and French organisations: “The past five years the Atelier has developed its antenna function to be able to detect developments in France that offer opportunities for the Netherlands. Especially regarding fashiontech and innovative textiles there is a lot of interest,” says Van Tilburg. Whenever possible, members can make use of the Ateliers’network in Paris and France.  

    Amongst members, many are active in the fashion industry. This sector is – worldwide – more and more criticised for its production processes. Innovation in the use of recycled materials, the environmental-friendly colouring of fabrics or the application of (bio)waste as material are generating attention in the Netherlands as well as in France. The two countries are complementary in these domains, according to Van Tilburg.


    Fabrics from organic materials at Biotech:Numerique exhibition (photo: Lisa Grob)

     

    Find an overview of activities and possibilities of the Atelier Néerlandais here. 

     

    Organization: 
    Atelier Néerlandais
  • Maastricht brings fashion to sister city Chengdu

    Maastricht brings fashion to sister city Chengdu

    From 24 March until 23 April, interdisciplinary platform Fashionclash will introduce 'Future of Fashion' in West China.
    20 March 2017

    From 24 March until 23 April, Maastricht-based interdisciplinary platform Fashionclash, jointly with Chinese partners Punch Me, Cross Lab and Dutch-Chinese organization About Asia will introduce Fashionclash 2017: Future of Fashion in Chengdu, China. After a successful first exhibition of Fashionclash in China in 2015, as part of an exchange programme between the sister-cities of Maastricht and Chengdu, the platform now presents a larger, more comprehensive, and complete story at the newly opened Future Center in downtown Chengdu.

    Future of Fashion
    ‘Future of Fashion’ is a multidisciplinary exhibition composed out of work of more than 30 emerging designers and artists from The Netherlands and Flanders. The presented work stands out for its concepts, experimental materials and textiles, innovative shapes and tailoring. In addition to fashion the exhibition features screenings of interdisciplinary fashion films and performances.

    The selection of participants is an eclectic mix of designers that graduated from the top schools such as AMFI, ArtEZ Arnhem, MAFAD, KABK, Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp and Theatre Academy Maastricht. Among the participants there are award winning designers like Marlou Breuls and Nikki Duijst, avant-garde designers’ collective Das Leben Am Haverkamp and promising theatre makers like Lotte Milder and Milou van Duijnhoven.

    In recent years, Dutch fashion practitioners are well presented in China with their cross-boundary experiments and creativity. After the comprehensive exhibition project The Future of Fashion is Now (Shanghai, Shenzhen, 2015-2016), co-organized by DutchCulture and Overseas China Town Group, 'Fashionclash 2017: Future of Fashion" is a new representation of cutting-edge Dutch fashion design in west of China.

    Read more about Flashionclash, it's annual festival in Maastricht and international fashion network.

  • The Netherlands and China to Collaborate More Intensively in the Field of Fashion

    On 28 October 2015, the Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs Bert Koenders opened the exhibition The Future of Fashion is Now in Shanghai.
     
    Click to see photo caption

    The Netherlands and China to Collaborate More Intensively in the Field of Fashion

    The recently opened exhibition in Shanghai, The Future of Fashion Is Now, is the inspiration for a special Chinese-Dutch collaborative effort.
    3 November 2015

    After the opening of the Museum Boijmans van Beuningen exhibition ‘The Future of Fashion is Now’ on 28 October in Shanghai, initiator Han Nefkens announced that a number of Chinese fashion talents are being invited to make new work for this exhibition. In due time, the new Chinese pieces will also be shown in Museum Boijmans van Beuningen in Rotterdam.

    More Dutch-Chinese collaboration
    The Future of Fashion is Now is also leading to other special collaborations. Several Dutch fashion designers accompanied the exhibition to China to exchange expertise with their Chinese colleagues. Immediately after the opening in Shanghai, Donghua University, which has one of China’s most important fashion institutes, signed a declaration of intent with the fashion school of the ArtEZ Institute of the Arts in Arnhem to work together in the area of fashion and innovation. ArtEZ, with famous alumni like Iris van Herpen and Pauline van Dongen, has an international reputation in this respect.

    At the moment, Donghua University is working with the city of Shanghai to create a platform where fashion designers, engineers and scientists can come together to help develop new techniques and manufacturing processes for the fashion industry around Shanghai.

    The Future of Fashion is Now
    Prior to this, the exhibition was presented in 2014 in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam. It was brought to China in connection with the state visit of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima. The Future of Fashion is Now will be on view in Shanghai for the next four months. After that the exhibition will travel to Shenzhen, where it will be shown from 26 March to 31 July 2016 in the Hua Gallery.

    Partners
    The Future of Fashion is Now and the exchange of knowledge between Dutch and Chinese designers and institutes is made possible by the generous support of the Chinese corporate group OCT, the Creative Industries Fund NL and the Dutch Ministry of Education, Cultural Affairs and Science, as well as contributions from Control Union Shanghai, Han Nefkens Fashion on the Edge, Next Fashion, the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts, The Pin Projects, the Dutch Embassy in Beijing and DutchCulture.

    Organization: 
    Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    Location: 
    OCT Contemporary Art Terminal Shanghai
  • Queen Máxima opens The Future of Fashion is Now in Shanghai

    Werk van Ying Gao (China/Canada) en Pauline van Dongen (Nederland) in The Future of Fashion is Now.

    Photo: Ying Gao, Pauline van Dongen
     
    Photo: Ying Gao, Pauline van Dongen

    Queen Máxima opens The Future of Fashion is Now in Shanghai

    The Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen’s successful fashion exhibition is its first ever to be shown in China, thanks to an initiative of DutchCulture.
    20 October 2015

    On 28 October, Queen Máxima of the Netherlands will officially open an exhibition of the work of some 25 International fashion designers during Her Majesty’s state visit to China.

    The Future of Fashion is Now, originally shown in Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in the autumn of 2014, presents the fashion of the future as seen by the newest generation of fashion designers. More than 25 young fashion talents from across the world, including eight from China, were invited to submit work. The exhibition also includes designs by respected Dutch innovators like Viktor & Rolf, Iris van Herpen and Pauline van Dongen.

    At the invitation of DutchCulture, Elisa van Joolen, Pauline van Dongen, Imme van der Haak and Antoine Peters are also traveling to China to share their expertise. These designers are actively seeking innovation in the fashion world. Futuristic technologies, sustainable clothing and new manufacturing processes for recycling materials and products are their starting points for designing the fashion of tomorrow. In conjunction with the exhibition, an intercultural programme has been organised, for various fashion schools and designers from the Netherlands and China have been invited to exchange their expertise.

    Chinese designers and the manufacturing industry
    The Future of Fashion is Now will be held from 28 October 2015 through 28 February 2016 at the OCT Contemporary Art Terminal in Shanghai. After 28 February, the exhibition is moving on to the OCT Art & Design Gallery in Shenzhen, where it will be shown from 26 March through 31 July 2016. The chosen locations are well suited for the exhibition’s subject matter. From time immemorial, Shanghai has been the fashion city where designers conduct their business. Around Shenzhen, there are many manufacturing plants that experiment with new technologies.

    Unique Dutch-Chinese collaboration
    This exhibition came about thanks to the several years’ relation between OCT and DutchCulture. OCT is the market leader in the amusement industry and one of China’s top five project developers. This private corporation has its own museums and an art collection. DutchCulture brought Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen and OCT in contact with each other and advised both parties on this collaboration.

    The presentation of the exhibition The Future of Fashion is Now in China has been partly made possible through the generous support of OCT, the Creative Industries Fund NL and the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science. Other parties that have contributed to the realisation of The Future of Fashion is Now in China are: Control Union Shanghai, Han Nefkens Fashion on the Edge Foundation (NL), Next Fashion, Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts (CN), The Pin Projects (CN) and the Dutch Embassy in Beijing.

    UPDATE 27 October
    Queen Maxima is cutting short her state visit to China and will return to the Netherlands to be hospitalized for a kidney infection, the Dutch government announced today.

    Organization: 
    OCT Contemporary Art Terminal Shanghai
    DutchCulture
    Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    Location: 
    OCT Contemporary Art Terminal Shanghai


  • Bengaluru Centre of the National Institute of Fashion Technology in India

    See also: Kakarla Usha (Expert)

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  • Regional centre of the National Institute of Fashion Technology in India 1986 was a turning point for the fashion industry in India. This was the year National Institute of Fashion Technology New Delhi was set up by the Ministry of Textiles, Government of India, in technical collaboration with FIT, New York. NIFT Delhi has produced a number of eminent alumni over the years like Rohit Bal, Ritu Beri, Manish Malhotra.... It offers a variety of Regular as well as CE programs. It has the olders and richest Resource Centre having a rich collections of print and non-print materials. See also: Rakhee Gupta Bhandari (Expert)

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  • National Institute of Fashion Technology was set up in 1986 under the aegis of the Ministry of Textiles, Government of India. It has emerged as the premier Institute of Design, Management and Technology, developing professionals for taking up leadership positions in fashion business in the emerging global scenario. NIFT has been granted statutory status under the act of Parliament of India in 2006, empowering the Institute to award degrees and other academic distinctions. The Institute is a pioneer in envisioning and evolving fashion business education in the country through a network of twelve professionally managed domestic centres at New Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Gandhinagar, Hyderabad, Kolkata, Mumbai, Raebareli, Bhopal, Kannur, Patna and Shillong. NIFT has further spread its wings globally with the opening of an international centre at Mauritius. NIFT has set academic standards and excelled in thought leadership by providing a pool of creative genius and technically competent professionals. The Institute provides a common platform for fashion education, research and training. ==Child Organisations== ====Regional Centres==== * Bengaluru Centre * Bhopal Centre * Bhubaneshwar Centre * Chennai Centre * Gandhinagar Centre * Hyderabad Centre * Jodhpur Centre * Kangra Centre * Kannur Centre * Kolkata Centre * Mumbai Centre * New Delhi Centre * Patna Centre * Raebareli Centre * Shillong Centre ====International Centres==== * Mauritius Centre See also: R.M. Singh (Expert)

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  • Modefabriek is recognised as a procreative and inspiring fashion trade event, proudly based in Amsterdam. Since its founding in 1996, it has evolved into much more. Today, Modefabriek is a mash-up of brand presentations, fashion shows, expos, stores, talks, classes, food & drinks, music – and more.

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  • 1 October 2016 to 8 January 2017

    Exhibition: Three Eyes - Five Young Chinese Designers

    Exhibition Three Eyes Poster
     
    Click to see photo caption

    Exhibition: Three Eyes - Five Young Chinese Designers

    Han Nefkens Foundation commissioned five young Chinese designers to make new works for exhibition The Future of Fashion is Now, shown in Shenzhen.
    1 October 2016 to 8 January 2017

    (source: Museum Boijmans van Beuningen)

    Last year the Han Nefkens Foundation commissioned five young Chinese designers to make new works for this exhibition, shown at the OCT Art & Design Gallery in Shenzhen, as a supplement to the travelling exhibition ‘The Future of Fashion is Now’.

    At the end of last year the well-known Chinese designers Zhang Da, Dooling Jiang and ZucZug drew up a list of current talented Chinese fashion stylists. Initiator Han Nefkens, guest curator José Teunissen and Feng Feng, the artistic director of the OCT Art and Design Gallery in Shenzhen, selected the designers of the new works from a shortlist. Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, in collaboration with Han Nefkens Fashion on the Edge, is showing these new Chinese works in Rotterdam from October onwards. This special joint venture has provided a platform for innovative fashion designers for several years now, creating an opportunity for talented national and international fashion designers to show their work to a wide public.

    The five designers Dido Liu, Fang Ye, Fixxed Studios, Percy Lau, ZAZ share the belief that tradition and the future must go hand in hand. According to Chinese culture, a designer needs three eyes: two to look to the future and one to look back on five thousand years of Chinese culture.

    The exhibition is accompanied by a publication, designed by Glamcult Studio and published by the Han Nefkens Foundation.

    Organization: 
    Han Nefkens
    Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    Location: 
    Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
    Discipline: 
    Fashion


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