Queer fashion practice and the camp tactics of Charles Jeffrey LOVERBOY

F. Hitchcock, Jay McCauley Bowstead
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Abstract

This article focuses on the collections of London-based, Glaswegian designer Charles Jeffrey who has won plaudits for his spectacular, subversive, theatrical and highly camp catwalk shows. His label LOVERBOY – having grown out of an East London club night of the same name – brings together eclectic historical references with the stylistic bricolage of the queer scene from which it emerged. Using a combination of image analysis and a semi-structured interview with Jeffrey, this article investigates how he has blurred the boundaries between the nightclub and the runway, the collective and the named designer to formulate a distinctly queer mode of fashion practice. At LOVERBOY the transformative possibilities of the nightclub; the heightened emotion of the dance floor; and the embodied, affective, temporal qualities of ‘queer sociality’ are transposed onto the catwalk, revealing the role of fashion and clothing in practices of queer world-making. Camp aesthetics and queer nightlife have played a crucial role in the history of fashion – perhaps most notably during the 1980s when designers like Bodymap, Jean Paul Gaultier and Stephen Linard drew extensively on queer signifiers in their work. However, the success of LOVERBOY marks a shift in contemporary cultures of gender as discourses of queerness and performativity reach a new point of amplification. After the seriousness, refinement and minimalism of millennial fashion, the liminality, polysemy and exuberance of camp has again reasserted its transgressive potential.
酷儿时尚实践与Charles Jeffrey LOVERBOY的阵营策略
本文关注的是伦敦格拉斯哥设计师查尔斯·杰弗里(Charles Jeffrey)的系列,他以壮观、颠覆性、戏剧性和高度camp的t台秀赢得了喝彩。他的品牌LOVERBOY——起源于东伦敦的一个同名俱乐部之夜——将兼收并蓄的历史参考与酷儿场景的风格拼凑在一起。本文结合图像分析和对杰弗里的半结构化采访,探讨了他是如何模糊夜店和t台、集体和具名设计师之间的界限,从而形成一种独特的酷儿时尚实践模式的。在LOVERBOY,夜总会变革的可能性;舞池中高涨的情绪;“酷儿社会”所体现的、情感的、时间的特质被转移到t台上,揭示了时尚和服装在酷儿世界创造实践中的作用。坎普美学和酷儿夜生活在时尚史上扮演了至关重要的角色——也许最引人注目的是在20世纪80年代,Bodymap、让·保罗·高缇耶(Jean Paul Gaultier)和斯蒂芬·林纳德(Stephen Linard)等设计师在他们的作品中广泛使用了酷儿的符号。然而,《LOVERBOY》的成功标志着当代性别文化的转变,酷儿话语和表演达到了一个新的放大点。在经历了千禧年时尚的严肃、精致和极简主义之后,坎普的模糊、多义性和繁盛再次重申了它的越界潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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