Iris van Herpen

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Iris van Herpen
Iris van Herpen during the Haute Couture Spring Summer 2012
Iris van Herpen during the Haute Couture Spring Summer 2012
Born (1984-06-05) June 5, 1984 (age 39)
Wamel, The Netherlands
Residence Amsterdam
Nationality Dutch
Occupation Fashion designer
Awards 2015 Marie-Claire Prix de la Mode, Best Dutch Conceptual Designer

2014 ANDAM Fashion Award
2013 Golden Eye Award
2013 Dutch Design Awards, category fashion
2013 Marie Claire prix de la Mode, best Dutch Designer
2010 Mercedes-Benz Dutch Fashion Awards
2010 Dutch Fashion Incubator Awards
2010 Dutch Accessory Awards
2010 Dutch Design Awards, RADO
2009 Dutch Design Awards, best product of fashion and accessory

2009 Dutch Media Awards
Website Iris van Herpen Official Website
Labels Iris van Herpen

Iris van Herpen (born 5 June 1984) is a Dutch fashion designer. She studied Fashion Design at ArtEZ Institute of the Arts Arnhem and interned at Alexander McQueen in London, and Claudy Jongstra in Amsterdam. Van Herpen immediately caught the eye with notable shows. In 2007, she started her own label. Since July 2011, she is a guest member of the prestigious Parisian Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture, which is part of the Fédération française de la couture. She participates in many international exhibitions and creates two collections a year.

Career

Iris van Herpen had an intuitive appreciation of fashion and art as a youth. Her first passion was actually dance. It was when she attended the Preparatory Course Art & Design at ArtEZ during her high school years that she became particularly interested in designing clothes.

She graduated in 2006 from the fashion design department of ArtEZ. The department has a strong international reputation and lists notable graduates as Viktor & Rolf, Alexander van Slobbe (SO; Orson+Bodil), and Lucas Ossendrijver (Lanvin Homme). One year after graduating, Van Herpen launched her own fashion label. Iris van Herpen creates women’s wear collections. Her designs require every time a unique treatment of material or the creation of complete new materials. For this reason, Van Herpen prefers interdisciplinary research and collaborations with other artists.[1]

From the beginning of her career Iris van Herpen’s talent has been singled out as very promising and it has grown strong over the years. Her work has been recognized through awards, exhibitions, publications, and her guest membership of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture.

Collaborations

Iris van Herpen has collaborated with a number of artists from various disciplines, often on a recurring basis.

Artists/Architects: Philip Beesley, Benthem Crouwel Architects, Isaie Bloch, Irene Bussemaker, Carlos van Camp, Zach Gold, Bart Hess, Stephen Jones, Julia Koerner, Rem D. Koolhaas, Russell Maliphant, Neri Oxman, Heaven Tanudiredja, Noritaka Tatehana, Joost Vandebrug, Daniel Widrig, Jolan van der Wiel

Musicians: Beyoncé,[2] Salvador Breed, Björk,[3][4] Grimes, Lady Gaga, Joey Yung, Iamamiwhoami

Photographers/Filmmakers: Pierre Debusschere, Zach Gold, Nick Knight, Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin,[5] Geoffrey Lillemon, Jean-Baptiste Mondino, Todd Selby, Joost Vandebrug, Vincent van de Wijngaard

Choreographers: Nanine Linning, Benjamin Millepied

Special Projects: A Magazine, Daphne Guinness, Casey Legler, Tilda Swinton

Style

3-D printed neckpiece by van Herpen, 2011.

Van Herpen’s fashion designs always express an interest in other art forms, and in a general curiosity of the world beyond fashion. Her collaborations during the research and making process are exemplary for this, as are her innovative experiments with materials, techniques and technologies.

As an aspiring fashion designer at the art academy, Van Herpen learned to work with soft fabric. She quickly felt limited by fabric, as she wanted to build, construct, and sculpt with the materials of which she created her designs. This forced her, already early on, to experiment with other materials, and later on to develop materials that approached her concept the closest.

Taken this into consideration, it is not surprising that ‘sculptural’ is a term much used to describe her work, and, indeed, the designs can function very well on their own as sculptures, as several exhibitions on her work have proven. Yet, the designs remain clothes they are not wearable sculptures, because there is another essential aspect to be taken into consideration: Van Herpen’s love for the body in movement. The design is only realized in equal interaction with the body. Van Herpen’s designs follow, complete, and change the body and the emotions that accompany it, when simultaneously the body adapts and adopts the new forms. Movement is key. It is of decisive importance for the ultimate design how a moving body reacts on a piece of clothing and, vice versa, how a piece of clothing behaves when worn.

Van Herpen’s decision to explore the Rapid prototyping technology of 3D printing allowed her to be the first to introduce this technology in fashion, and to create astonishing designs with it. Van Herpen became fascinated with the endless design potential of 3D printing. In recent collections she further developed her prints by adding detailed handwork.

The 3D prints only added to that other much-heard term to describe Van Herpen’s style: futuristic. Besides the use of new technologies, the term mostly refers to the appearance of her looks. What is very important to realize, though, is that her designs combine new technologies and diligent handwork. In fact, this is characteristic for all Van Herpen’s collections. Exactly this combination of handwork and innovative technologies brings Van Herpen to her edgy designs. She equally values techniques from the past and techniques and technologies of the future, because they have their own power and beauty that, when rightly combined, can be enhanced instead of being substituted by one another.

Collections

    • HACKING INFINITY – Womenswear (Ready-to-wear), F/W 2015-16
    • With Hacking Infinity Iris van Herpen explores the idea of terraforming: modifying the biosphere of another planet to resemble that of Earth. The collection explores the possibility of new geographies and our place within them. The desire to reconfigure space finds expression in light performative materials, biomimetic structures and saturated spectral colors that interact with the movement of the body. The central geometry is the circle, in both silhouette and cut. The spherical shape of planetary bodies and the symbol of a boundless ‘hackable’ infinity unfolds before us in a constant flow of mandala-like forms. Van Herpen developed an extremely light, translucent stainless steel weave, hand burnished to imprint a sheen of nebula-like colors, whose infinite variations make each garment unique. Three-dimensionality is imperative to Van Herpen, and she continues her research with the creation of a 3D-handwoven textile with designer Aleksandra Gaca. One weave like a mineral geology encases the body while the other cushions it with a light linear grid, threaded and fringed with a raw edge. Van Herpen pursues her collaboration with the Canadian professor of architecture Philip Beesley on the creation of digitally fabricated dresses made from a black garden of fractal like geometries. The shoes for this collection were made in collaboration with the Japanese shoe designer Noritaka Tatehana.[6] They are crafted from 3D-printed translucent crystal clusters and laser-cut leather.
    • MAGNETIC MOTION - S/S 2015, Womenswear
    • In this ready-to-wear collection Iris van Herpen explores the interplay of magnetic forces. Her visit to the Large Hadron Collider in CERN provided inspiration to explore the representation of dynamic forces of attraction and repulsion. “I find beauty in the continual shaping of chaos which clearly embodies the primordial power of nature’s performance,” says Van Herpen describing the essence of the collection. She brought together Philip Beesley’s pioneering work in responsive ‘living’ sculptures and artist and craftsman Jolan van der Wiel, whose work with magnetic tension has resulted in dynamic sculptures and installations that bring to mind the power of volcanic eruptions. Both artists strive to erase the boundaries between nature and technology in their work, which coincides with the direction of van Herpen’s creative aim. Van Herpen worked with techniques like injection molding and laser cutting on maze like structures, 3D-printing and intricate architectural handwork on dresses, jackets, trousers, skirts and blouses giving them dynamic shapes and surfaces that echo the body’s movement. The three-dimensional nature and the layering of the garments give them volume. The controlled structure of the clothes is countered by the chaotic structure of the accessories, where, due to the nature of magnetic growth, no two items are alike. The shoes, belts, necklaces and clutches were “grown” using magnetic fields.
    • BIOPIRACY - Womenswear
    • A mix of ready-to-wear and couture pieces is presented with artist Lawrence Malstaf -who specializes in the interaction between biology and physicality.[7] Models float in the air, embryonic, seemingly weightless and in a meditative suspended animation. They came into being through the intriguing question, preceding this collection, on the purchase of patents of our genes in the recent past: Are we still the sole proprietors of our bodies? From this question arises a sense of arrested freedom in one's most intimate, solitary state. Metamorphosis is suggested through intricate enmeshing of materials. Imprisoned fire opal beads gleam through lacerated weaves; artificial fibers compose voluminous, architectural structures, like the organic ripple of light on water. A 3D-printing collaboration with Julia Koerner fuses the artisanal with the technical to create a kinetic dress which dances as it amplifies bodily movement. Molded boots in collaboration with United Nude accelerate and reconfigure the silhouette.
    • EMBOSSED SOUNDS – Womenswear
    • Fascinated by the relationship and potential porosity between the senses, Iris Van Herpen has developed clothes that generate sounds by touch. ‘Embossed Sounds’ is the name of her orchestra of human touch, which explores garments as electronic instruments that one can touch and play. By touching the clothes, music is sculpted live by the models for their audience in an intimate performance.
    Touch sensitive and sensual audio waves threading and weaving over the body create an intricate sonic web. The collection plays on a visual duality and ambiguity, combining the ethereal feminine softness of plissé with the flick knife and swagger of the underground rebel biker.
    • WILDERNESS EMBODIED - July 2013, Paris Haute Couture Week
    • Through her collaboration with artist Jolan van der Wiel, who has spent several years pondering the possibilities of magnetism, Van Herpen created dresses whose very forms are generated by the phenomenon of attraction and repulsion. She draws equally upon the life force that pulses through the sculptures of David Altmejd.[8] His wild organic forms derived from the regenerative processes of nature have inspired this collection. With architect Isaie Bloch and Materialise she continues to develop 3D-printed dresses, which she was the first to present in both static and flexible forms. Her partnership with United Nude's Rem D. Koolhaas and Stratasys has led to shoes like tangled webs of tree-roots around the foot.
    • VOLTAGE - 2013, Paris Haute Couture Week
    • For her fourth collection as a guest member of the Chambre syndicale de la Haute Couture, Iris van Herpen explores the electricity of the body. Experimenting with its use in the field of creation, this collection seeks to portray its tangible movement and power. This ability of light and electricity to change states and bodies is reproduced using the most innovative technologies. Described as an alchemist approach to fashion, Van Herpen’s designs perpetually embrace new collaborations with artists, architects and researchers.
    As part of the show she collaborated with new Zealand artist Carlos Van Camp, echoing his notion of controlling high voltage electricity and its interaction with the human body. Van Camp experiments with three million volts running through bodies. Van Herpen’s ongoing collaboration with architect Philip Beesley’s focuses in this collection specifically on how the reaction of chemistry and electricity causes structures to respond to their environment and react as living beings.
    • HYBRID HOLISM – July 2012, Paris Haute Couture Week
    • The project Hylozoic Ground by the Canadian architect and artist Philip Beesley provided the inspiration for this collection. Hylozoic refers to Hylozoism, the ancient belief that all matter is in some sense alive. Beesley created a responsive architectural system that uses hylozoism in a quite specific way, that is, “we are working with subtle materials, electricity and chemistry, weaving together interactions that at first create an architecture that simulates life but increasingly these interactions are starting to act like life, like some of the ingredients of life”. His environment breathes, shifts and moves in relationship to people walking through it, touching it, and sensing it. Microprocessors invest that environment with a primitive or insect-like intelligence like a coral reef or a great swarm.[9] Van Herpen 3D-print for this collection is named the 'pythagoras tree' dress inspired by a Dutch book on drawings produced by a Belgian artist based on the Pythagoras tree (fractal).[10] Considering the level of detail (in repetition) of the fractals, the different level(s) of perception, their use in studying images, structures and sounds, the possibility of describing processes in time, etcetera, it fits Van Herpen's fascination like a glove, especially with regard to this collection.
    Iris van Herpen is intrigued by these kinds of possibilities for a future of fashion that might take on quite unimaginable shapes. Fashion that might be partly alive and growing, and, therefore, existing partly independent from us, which in turn allows for a new treatment by humans: instead of discarding the fashion after use, we cherish, value, and maintain it in its abilities to change constantly. Van Herpen’s translated this future vision in a collection that is highly complex and incredibly diverse in terms of shape, structure, and material.
    • MICRO – January 2012, Paris Haute Couture Week
    • Inspired by the pictures that science photographer Steve Gschmeissner took using Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) technology, Micro zooms in on the world of microorganisms that is completely hidden from our sight. The pictures show specimens that are dead, dried, and chemically fixated to preserve and stabilize their structures. Van Herpen remains interested in the living organism. Her designs allude to armature, tentacles, cell structures, and plasma. Some seem moist others glow and move while being worn, coming to live on the body. For one design, the ‘cathedral dress’ Van Herpen introduced a technique referred to as mammoth stereolithography which refers to a 3D printing method. This 3D printed process is built slice by slice from bottom to top, in a vessel of polymer that hardens when struck by a laser beam.[11]
    • CAPRIOLE – July 2011, Paris Haute Couture Week
    • Iris van Herpen made her debut in Paris as member of the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture with this collection. Besides being a compilation of highlights from previous collections, this new collection also presented five striking outfits that evoke the feeling just before and during a free-fall parachute jump. A ‘leap in the air’ (the meaning of the French word Capriole) that Van Herpen once in a while takes to reset her body and mind. The five outfits are a reflection of the extreme feelings experienced during that jump. For instance, the dress consisting of serpentine forms made of black acrylic sheets, nicknamed the ‘snake dress’, evokes the mental state at the moment before the jump when, as Van Herpen explains, “all my energy is in my head and I feel as though my mind is snaking through thousands of bends”.[12]
    • ESCAPISM – January 2011, Paris Haute Couture Week
    • Escaping from everyday reality through addictive digital entertainment incites in Iris van Herpen not only feelings of emptiness but also associations with the grotesque, the extreme and the fantastic. This collection aims to capture both the exaltation of these addictions, like the disproportionate attention for celebrities (the ‘new heroes’) and its dark flipside, the never fulfilled hunger that is inherent to it. Another important source of inspiration were the exuberant baroque sculptures of the American artist Kris Kuksi. Dramatic bulging spherical shapes alternate with lace- and skeleton-like 3D-prints, and silver-grey fabrics that seem to reflect their own surface.
    • CRYSTALLIZATION – July 2010, Amsterdam Fashion Week
    • At the instigation of ARCAM (Architecture Centre Amsterdam) a collaboration was organized between Iris van Herpen and Benthem Crouwel Architekten. Benthem Crouwel’s design for a new extension to Amsterdam’s Stedelijk Museum had earned the nickname ‘bath tub’. This inspired Van Herpen to design a dress that would fall around the wearer like a splash of water, like being immersed in a warm bath, and to express in the collection the different states, structures and patterns of water.
    Noteworthy is that in this collection Van Herpen presents her first 3D-print that she created in collaboration with the London-based architect Daniel Widrig and that was printed by .MGX by Materialise.[13][14]
    • SYNESTHESIA – February 2010, London Fashion Week
    • Synaesthesia is a neurological condition that results in a combination of sensory perceptions. To underscore the hypersensitivity of the body, and to visualize this entanglement of sensory perceptions Van Herpen secured shiny metal foil on specially treated leather that generated a confusing visual effect without a steady fixation point.
    • RADIATION INVASION – September 2009, London Fashion Week
    • Radiation Invasion translates Iris van Herpen’s question of what we could do with our daily (over)dose of electromagnetic waves and digital information streams if we could see them. In these designs the wearer seems to be surrounded by a whimsical complex of wavy rays, flickering patterns, vibrating particles, and reflecting pleats.
    • MUMMIFICATION – January 2009, Amsterdam Fashion Week
    • Van Herpen became captivated with the macabre beauty of ancient Egyptian mummification and the intense devotion that surrounds the process. With techniques to swaddle, wrap and cover the body along with the typical geometric and graphic patterns of Egyptian mummies, she elaborates on the practice of the ancient Egyptians to create a new reality for their dead.
    • REFINERY SMOKE – July 2008, Amsterdam Fashion Week
    • The ambiguous character of refinery smoke, both beautiful and poisonous, inspired this collection. Van Herpen translated the elusiveness of industrial smoke into specially woven metal gauze. She turned metal threads into an extremely soft and pliable material. The metal kept its characteristic of oxidation and Van Herpen considers this inherent chemical process as (visually) reflecting the dual aspect of industrial smoke.
    • CHEMICAL CROWS – January 2008, Amsterdam Fashion Week
    • A group of crows living around Van Herpen’s studio triggered her association with black magic and alchemy. Crows are known for their intelligence, predilection for glittering objects, and are traditionally associated with secrecy and symbolism. Van Herpen shares with alchemists a passion for controlling and transmuting materials. As alchemists tried to turn base metals into gold, so Van Herpen has transformed in several designs gold-coloured ribs of 700 children’s umbrellas into shapes reminiscent of the movement of wings and feathers.
    • FRAGILE FUTURITY - July 2007, Amsterdam Fashion Week
    • Starting point for this collections was the fusion of animal instinct and human rationality. The resulting 'creatures/creations' of this combination reflected Van Herpen's view on the future: fragile, vulnerable and evolved. She experimented with forms and shapes of wings, horns, and snake prints.

Awards

  • 2015 Marie-Claire Prix de la Mode, Best Dutch Conceptual Designer
  • 2014 ANDAM Fashion Award
  • 2013 Golden Eye Award
  • 2013 Dutch Design Awards, category fashion
  • 2013 Marie Claire prix de la mode, best Dutch Designer
  • 2010 Mercedes-Benz Dutch Fashion Awards
  • 2010 Dutch Fashion Incubator Awards
  • 2010 Dutch Accessory Awards
  • 2010 Dutch Design Awards, RADO
  • 2009 Dutch Design Awards, best product of fashion and accessory
  • 2009 Dutch Media Awards

TIME Magazine names Iris van Herpen's 3D printed dresses one of the 50 Best Inventions of 2011.[15]

Exhibitions

  • 2015 Palais de Tokyo Museum, Le bord des Mondes exhibition, Paris, FR
  • 2015 Victoria & Albert Museum, What Is Luxury?, London, UK
  • 2015 Musée de l’histoire de l’immigration - Palais de la Porte Dorée, Fashion Mix: le parcours de l'exposition, Paris, FR
  • 2015 LENTOS Kunstmuseum Linz, Love and Loss: Fashion and Mortality, Linz, AT
  • 2014 FIT Museum, Dance & Fashion, NYC, US
  • 2014 Clash- Resistance in Fashion, Heart Herning Museum of Contemporary Art, Herning, DK
  • 2014 Bass Museum of Art, Vanitas: Fashion and Art, Miami Beach, US
  • 2014 A Queen Within: Adorned Archetypes, The World Chess Hall of Fame, Missouri, US
  • 2014 The Future of Fashion is Now, Boijmans Museum Rotterdam, NL
  • 2014 MAD Museum, Out of Hand. Materializing the Postdigital, NYC, US
  • 2014 Solo exhibition, overview of all collections Textilmuseet Boras in collaboration with Groninger Museum, Boras, SE
  • 2014 Mode, de musical, Centraal Museum Utrecht, NL
  • 2013 Solo exhibition, overview of all collections. Museum Cite-Dentelle in collaboration with Groninger Museum, Calais, FR
  • 2013 ArchiLab. Naturalizing Architecture at new FRAC Centre, Orléans, FR
  • 2013 Exhibition SHOWcabinet / SHOWstudio.com, London, UK
  • 2013 MºBA Fetishism in Fashion. Mode Biënnale Arnhem, NL
  • 2013 HAND MADE. Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, NL
  • 2012 Iris van Herpen. Solo exhibition, Groninger Museum, Groningen, NL Groninger Museum Iris van Herpen
  • 2012 MICRO Impact. Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, NL
  • 2012 Excellent Craft. Palace House of Orange. Berlin, DE
  • 2012 Iris van Herpen. SIEN, exhibition and an exclusive selection of Iris van Herpen. Opening October 13, 2012. Antwerp, BE
  • 2011 Self Structure. Lieu du Design, Paris, FR
  • 2011 London Design Festival. Victoria & Albert Museum, London, UK
  • 2011 The New Craftsmanship. Iris van Herpen and her inspiration. Centraal Museum, Utrecht, NL
  • 2011 Basic Instinct. Berlin, DE
  • 2011 Mode Biennale Arnhem. Arnhem, NL
  • 2011 Material World. Art, Design and Fashion. Groninger Museum, Groningen, NL
  • 2011 Washed up (curated by Judith Clark). Selfridges department store, London, UK
  • 2011 Little Black Dress. The Civic gallery, Barnsley, UK
  • 2011 Transformation. Swarovski exhibition at flagship store in Vienna, AT
  • 2011 Fashion&Chocolate. Harbour City Exhibition, Hong Kong, CN
  • 2010 BLACK. Masters of Black in Fashion & Costume. MOMU, Antwerp, BE
  • 2010 Fashion & Architecture. ARCAM, Amsterdam, NL
  • 2010 In your Face. Centraal Museum, Utrecht, NL
  • 2010 Dutch Design Awards exhibition. Eindhoven, NL
  • 2010 Best of Dutch Design. Red Dot Museum, Essen, DE
  • 2010 Dutch Cultural Pop-up Space. London Fashion Week, London, UK
  • 2010 10xxx. Gallery Helpuzelven, Winterswijk, NL
  • 2010 Haute Couture Voici Paris. Gemeentemuseum, The Hague, NL
  • 2009 Harrods launches. In-store exhibition and sales, London, UK
  • 2009 Shape. Mode Biennale Arnhem, NL
  • 2009 Dutch Design Awards. Eindhoven, NL
  • 2009 Design Overtime. Eureka Night, Design Museum, London UK
  • 2009 Shanghai Creative Industries Week, Shanghai, CN
  • 2009 Rollan Didier meets Iris van Herpen. Gallery FashionMania, Amsterdam, NL
  • 2008 Bridges to Fashion. Historical Museum, Rotterdam, NL
  • 2008 Galeries Lafayette. Paris, FR
  • 2008 V!P Gallery. Rotterdam, NL
  • 2008 Mememachine Gallery, Tokyo, JP
  • 2007 SPRMRKT. Amsterdam, NL

Publications

Notes

  1. http://www.irisvanherpen.com/about
  2. http://www.irisvanherpen.com/blog/beyonce-mine-full-video
  3. http://thecreatorsproject.com/blog/dressing-björk-meet-fashion-designer-iris-van-herpen
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. http://inezandvinoodh.com/video/bjork-biophilia-moon/
  6. http://noritakatatehana.com
  7. http://www.fortlaan17.com/artists/lawrence-malstaf
  8. http://www.davidaltmejd.com
  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Ernst, Bruno van, e.a. Bomen van Pythagoras, variaties van Jos de Mey. Aramith Uitgevers: Amsterdam, 1985
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External links