Texarkana Gazette

Asian fashion designer Kansai Yamamoto dies

- By Vanessa Friedman and Elizabeth Paton

Kansai Yamamoto, the unapologet­ically flamboyant fashion designer whose love of color, unfettered imaginatio­n and exploratio­n of genderless dressing caught the eye of David Bowie and helped define the look of his alter ego, Ziggy Stardust, died in Japan on July 21. He was 76.

The cause was leukemia, a statement on his office website confirmed. It did not say where in Japan he died.

Kansai, as Yamamoto was generally known, was not as well-known as some of his more high-profile Japanese fashion contempora­ries, including Yohji Yamamoto, Issey Miyake and Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garçons. But it was Kansai who led the way for a generation of Japanese design talents to make their mark on the Western industry.

In 1971, he was among the first Japanese designers to show in London — a full decade before Kawakubo and the other Yamamoto. His signature aesthetic of sculptural shapes, clashing textures and prints, and eye-popping color combinatio­ns attracted industry attention.

Kansai’s debut collection was splashed across the cover of Harpers & Queen magazine with the tagline “Explosion from Tokyo,” and his growing profile led to collaborat­ions with the decade’s most important musician showmen, including Elton John and Stevie Wonder in addition to Bowie, with whom he formed a long-standing creative relationsh­ip.

“Color is like the oxygen we are both breathing in the same space,” Kansai once said of his work with Bowie, who died in 2016.

In a talk at the Brooklyn Museum in New York City during its 2018 “David Bowie Is” exhibition, to which he wore an elaborate black-andgold brocade suit that he characteri­zed as “minimal,” Kansai recalled meeting Bowie in 1973. Bowie’s producer had called Kansai and asked him to come to Radio City Music Hall in New York, where, in a concert, Bowie descended the stage on a giant disco ball.

The two men soon discovered that they shared a love of “radical appearance” and pushing boundaries. In fact, Bowie had been wearing Kansai’s womenswear since 1971. From 1973 onward, they worked together to create one-off showpieces for Bowie’s stage personas and music tours, including the 1973 “Aladdin Sane” tour.

There were exuberant skintight jumpsuits with giant flared hems and silken brocade bomber jackets, androgynou­s cloaks with cutaways and vivid platform shoes. Often, the costumes incorporat­ed elements from Japanese culture, particular­ly the silhouette of the kimono and the bold aesthetics of medieval samurai warlords.

“I approached Bowie’s clothes as if I was designing for a female,” Kansai said at the Brooklyn Museum talk, pointing out that there was “no zipper in front.” He also said that the number of costume changes required had inspired him to use snaps on Bowie’s costumes, so they could be removed faster.

His favorite piece for the singer was the black-andwhite jumpsuit with bowed legs featured in the “David Bowie Is” exhibition, which was first mounted in 2013 at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London before traveling around the world.

“I found David’s aesthetic and interest in transcendi­ng gender boundaries shockingly beautiful,” Kansai told the website The Cut in 2018.

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