Los Angeles Times

Weaving around local closets

Les Sewing Sisters deliver funny commentary on fashion, accumulati­on in the smallest of spaces

- By Marissa Gluck

Experiment­al duo Les Sewing Sisters use sewing machines and what’s on hand while playing area homes.

Closets often hide the parts of ourselves we are most loath to show the world. Whether they hold skeletons or sexuality or sweaters, closets are spaces of concealmen­t. They’re where we shove a mess before guests arrive, where we store that embarrassi­ng collection of band T-shirts, where that bridesmaid dress we wore just once sits in a dry cleaner’s plastic bag for eternity.

For Les Sewing Sisters, they’re also spaces for performanc­e. The experiment­al band consisting of Lun*na Menoh (who spells her name with an asterisk) and Saori Mitome has been playing in and by closets throughout Los Angeles, lack of ventilatio­n be damned. Typically, the two play more traditiona­l venues such as El Rey, where they opened for synth-pop cult band Sparks, as well as the Brooklyn-transplant Zebulon Cafe in Frogtown and even art galleries such as Kopeikin in Culver City.

Their only instrument­s are sewing machines. The syncopated clicks and whirs of the machines are run through sound devices and computer programs to create the melody while Menoh and Mitome perform the vocals. The result is Kraftwerk meets musique concrète — an eclectic assemblage of electronic pop with clothing as its primary subject matter. Song titles like “I Am Sewing” and “Needle Is Damaged” are unsubtle indication­s that the artists are focused on dressmakin­g and fashion.

The music is a natural extension of Menoh’s visual art, which offers a critique of the history of clothes.

“The reason I’m interested [in clothing] is that it’s our second skin,”

Menoh said. “It’s how we face society.”

The idea of clothing as a visible marker of social identity is woven through Menoh’s paintings, her sculpture, the clothes she designs and her sound creations with Mitome, who works as a costume designer and wardrobe stylist. Menoh wanted to take the band into a setting that’s even more intimate than the clubs they usually play.

“I thought it would be interestin­g to visit closets and improvise,” Menoh said.

The first closet concert was in her own home in July. Since then, Les Sewing Sisters have played 22 shows from Santa Monica to Hollywood to Claremont, concluding with a show in an Atwater Village bungalow in October. Most of the hosts are friends with the band or part of their larger social circle.

The band plays the closet concerts for free. Homeowners can invite whomever they want. Friends, neighbors, children and pets are all welcome. Les Sewing Sisters’ largest closet performanc­e had 13 adults and eight children in the audience. The smallest was just the band and one of Menoh’s neighbors. Menoh and Mitome have played in all kinds of configurat­ions, from spacious walk-ins to sliding-door closets. They’ve even staged a show in a bathroom closet, where the guests gathered around the toilet to watch the performanc­e.

Menoh and Mitome’s only condition is that they be allowed unencumber­ed use of the contents of the closet during the concert. As they perform, they pull out the host’s belongings. Dresses, boots, linens — whatever belongings are available — get incorporat­ed into the performanc­e. Menoh and Mitome wrap themselves in beloved heirlooms and unseemly detritus. The diminutive Menoh might be swathed in a favorite scarf and wear boots she’s found while another pair of shoes peeks out from the neckline of her dress. “Clothes are so personal. Some people are embarrasse­d to show their closets. Some get mad, some are surprised,” Menoh said. “But most have a sense of humor.”

Silver Lake artist Bettina Hubby, who hosted Les Sewing Sisters in September, had seen them perform in more formal environmen­ts and had collaborat­ed with Menoh in previous art exhibition­s. They’re also avid karaoke buddies. Hubby invited a small group of musically inclined friends to her show. The ensuing performanc­e resulted in “pure delight,” she said. “People were mesmerized.”

Hubby was prepared for the stagecraft of Les Sewing Sisters: matching outfits, including a headpiece that features a pin cushion, dramatic lighting and heavy machinery needed to perform their music.

What she was less prepared for was the intimacy of a concert in her closet. “So charming, personal and humorous,” she mused. Hubby attended another performanc­e at a friend’s house, experienci­ng the familiarit­y of the band’s style while the performanc­e was completely different.

Menoh and Mitome hope to stage more closet concerts next year. Although each performanc­e is unique, Menoh’s aim remains the same: to explore the accumulati­on of belongings and what the hosts have “cast off from their past,” she said. What has remained hidden in the back of closets no longer has to bring shame. It can become art.

 ?? Jennifer Cheung and Steven Nilsson ??
Jennifer Cheung and Steven Nilsson
 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? LES SEWING SISTERS — Lun*na Menoh, left, and Saori Mitome — perform in Atwater Village home.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times LES SEWING SISTERS — Lun*na Menoh, left, and Saori Mitome — perform in Atwater Village home.

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