Sunday Times

SACK YOUR INNER GODDESS

A top trends forecaster hits on a pretty obvious — and accommodat­ing — idea for what’s about to be hot

- WORDS PICTURES

Thirty-two presentati­ons over three days can warp your mind, but “warp” is a pretty hot word in design circles. Not as hot as “goddess”, though, according to Li Edelkoort , who spoke this week to an assemblage of the design faithful at Lisof School of Design, a few days ahead of her Cape Town talk, which is an annual part of Design Indaba’s 32 presentati­ons. Edelkoort is known around the world to have a handle on the main thrust of design and where it’s going in the future.

The design soothsayer is one of the world’s most acclaimed trend forecaster­s. She makes a fortune predicting the future of form, colour and material for industries as varied as fashion, food, architectu­re, automotive, interiors and cosmetics.

Mushrooms and androgyny were going to be big in the future of design, she informed us in past presentati­ons. As were agelessnes­s and transgress­ion. Children would be sages and the aged would be childlike. Donkey brown had a moment a few years ago and lichen was nature’s inspiratio­n for a season or two.

This year’s talk, entitled “Goddesses Are Emerging Female Archetypes in Fashion”, included the key words “emancipati­on”, “empowermen­t”, “nourishing”, “earthy” and “diplomatic” — with not a #MeToo in sight.

To many in design circles Edelkoort is herself a god(dess), and yet it doesn’t seem a huge stretch of the imaginatio­n for anyone — bar those examining lichen under actual rocks — to have predicted this trend themselves, what with the shifting tides of humanity and the growing waves of antipatria­rchal sentiment.

Goddesses are, according to Edelkoort,

“at the root of the emerging female fashion archetype for the industry with individual­s determinin­g their own goddess based on individual tastes”. This prediction allows her to cover all the bases: Mother Earth is nourishing;

Athena is intellectu­al and strong; Bastet is catlike and sexy; Hestia is domesticat­ed and romantic; Persephone is eternally young, fresh and delicate; Artemis is a hunter; Adoma is confident — and African in origin; Oshun is South American; Saraswati is Indian; Nike is active and the Old Goddess is, well, old . . . and so on.

So how does this translate into fashion? Basically, choose a goddess and wear anything you like, as long as you lose the heels — they’re out. Flats are grounding, and we all know how much people in the fashion world need a bit of that. Oh, and draping, folding and loose cuts are in.

Edelkort expects normcore and streetwear basics to dissolve. That shift calls for “designers, not influencer­s,” she said. The underlying message: free your form from the restrictiv­e expectatio­ns of patriarchy . . . and for goodness sake, if you want to feel like a goddess, wear a sack.

LAndrea Nagel Getty Images & Pinterest

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