The Guardian (USA)

‘It became a mainstay’: How Issey Miyake helped define Melbourne style

- Lucianne Tonti

One evening during Melbourne design week, I was drinking warm prosecco in a dimly lit third-floor office that overlooked Russell Street in the city’s centre. A friend had asked me to accompany her to the exhibition opening being held there. Of course, the office belonged to an architectu­re firm.

The crowd was stylish in a typically Melbourne way. There were blackrimme­d glasses, workman’s jackets and designer sneakers in every corner. But as I scanned the photograph­ers and brand directors in attendance, I realised at least half the room was wearing the floating, sculptural silhouette­s of Issey Miyake, easily distinguis­hable by the tiny, perfect pleats that somehow give form and also take it away.

Miyake died this week at the age of 84, leaving behind a formidable legacy. He founded his studio in the early 1970s and was one of the first Japanese designers to present collection­s in Paris. He began to experiment with pleating in the late 1980s, finally patenting the heat-pressing technique that created permanent pleats in polyester in 1993.

This formed the basis of Pleats Please, the line of clothing that is arguably his most recognisab­le, with its loosely tapered pants, tops with the shoulder and sleeve rounded into one, and rippling calf-length shift dresses. This look, often accessoris­ed with his signature Bao Bao bag, has become synonymous with Melbourne style (to the point of occasional parody).

That each shape can be worn with something sporty such as a sneaker, or something delicate like a strappy sandal, is a credit to the joy, universali­ty and freedom Miyake determined­ly imbued in his garments.

Robyn Healy, a professor of fashion design at RMIT University, says this fluidity is why his designs have been part of Melbourne’s fashion culture since the early 1980s. “Dressing in clothes that were not based on European traditions of making, gender or season alignment appealed to Melburnian­s,” she says. In contrast to the body consciousn­ess one might typically associate with Australian style, residents of the country’s self-proclaimed cultural capital “were attracted to clothing that draped, wrapped or hung around the body”.

Lucinia Pinto carried Issey Miyake at several boutiques she owned across the city from the 1970s to the early 2000s. She is firm in her belief that his designs influenced the way Melburnian­s dress. “The clothing appealed to people who appreciate­d art … So, it became a mainstay of Melbourne architects, for instance, who loved the detailed constructi­on and the fit.”

In 1997, she collaborat­ed with Miyake to open Australia’s first and only Issey Miyake store in South Yarra. She describes it as a vaulted space, made up of lime-green wall panels and a white vinyl floor. “It was the perfect backdrop for his work which was a mixture of tailored and pleated items, many of them Melbourne-black, but others in electrifyi­ng colours.”

Five years later Pinto closed all of her boutiques, making Miyake harder for Melbourne’s creative class to find – at least until the advent of online shopping.

Now, two decades later, the soft shapes and amorphous hemlines are available from the online store Shifting Worlds (formerly on Elizabeth Street). Maya Webb, the store’s owner, attests to the longevity of the clothes – some of her clients still have Miyake pieces they bought from Pinto in the 1990s. “Miyake designs seem to be held on to in a way that other brands aren’t,” she says.

She believes Melburnian­s love Miyake because “it fits so well into a ‘casual luxury’ category” that suits a city defined by its culture, not its beaches.

Pinto describes Miyake’s work as “a joyful, sculptural ‘dance’ of fabric to partner the human form”. Fashion that sits in the nexus between constructi­on and art has had a lasting impact on local designers. From the ruching and necklines of Permanent Vacation to the draping and form of Alpha60, Miyake’s influence is evident.

Alpha60’s creative director, Georgie Cleary, says: “He managed to combine art, fashion and innovation so seamlessly in his designs, and this is something we continuall­y strive for.”

 ?? Photograph: Naomi Rahim/WireImage ?? A Melbourne fashion festival attendee wears a finely pleated black top in a style pioneered by Issey Miyake.
Photograph: Naomi Rahim/WireImage A Melbourne fashion festival attendee wears a finely pleated black top in a style pioneered by Issey Miyake.
 ?? Photograph: Mackenzie Sweetnam/WireImage ?? A model wears Issey Miyake from Melbourne boutique Shifting Worlds during Melbourne fashion week in 2019.
Photograph: Mackenzie Sweetnam/WireImage A model wears Issey Miyake from Melbourne boutique Shifting Worlds during Melbourne fashion week in 2019.

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