Silk Ties by Vivienne Westwood, co-founder of The Punk Style
Posted: Monday, June 04, 2007
by Patrick
Patrick McMurray
As a stylist Vivienne Westwood has remained peerless for
decades. From co-founder of the punk style to Dame of The British Empire, it’s
been a long road out of Tintwistle to the international fashion arena and back
again. She managed to tuck some big names under her belt during her travels
too, like Wedgwood. And a few best designers of the year awards as well.
Vivienne doesn’t waste her breath giving lip service to
originality and individuality, she lives and breathes them. Just a glance at
her credentials will reveal this to be true and allay any doubt of her ability
to stay ahead of the pack. At sixty six her mind remains young and vibrant in
spite of her aging body. And she doesn’t wear knickers even when accepting her
DBE, now how original is that?
Vivienne Isabel Swire was born in
Glossopdale, Derbyshire, on
She left grammar school at 16 and briefly
attended
Vivienne always enjoyed 'cutting a
dash'. As a teenager in the 1950s, she customised her school uniform to emulate
the fashionable pencil skirt and made many of her own clothes, including a
long, fitted 'New Look' dress. She made sleeveless shifts, with a single seam
and darts, from exactly one yard of fabric.
In 1965 she met Malcolm McLaren
together they went on to become one of the most creative partnerships in
history, similar to the Tommy Nutter, Sexton coalition. Westwood and
McLaren revolutionised fashion, and the impact is still felt today. Their working relationship, which lasted from 1970 until 1983,
launched Punk, the style was later epitomised by The Sex Pistols.
unk clothes were never cheap, but
the Punks improvised their own gear and the look spread rapidly. It provoked
open hostility and is still potent today. Westwood viewed it as 'a heroic
attempt to confront the older generation', but inevitably it was absorbed and
disarmed by the mainstream. Westwood, then in her early forties, turned her
attention to subverting the Establishment from within.
Now Vivienne has an impressive range of silk ties, they’re
as cool and refreshing as a sea breeze on a hot stuffy summer’s day. There’s
her tongue tie, displaying a large print of an open mouth with full, rounded
lips, framing a wet tongue: “tongue tied" “get it"? And then there’s her oops
tie, with what appears to be stains near the tip of the blade. Now chaps how
many times at the dinner table have you stained your tie and then said “oops"? Far
from being categorised as garish novelties, they are works of art. Perhaps
other designers will take head and stop flogging dead horses.
A return to punk style would be fruitless, there’s no gain
in reliving the past and revivals are often short lived, but we can learn from
the past without patronising it. Designers often extract elements of past
styles and modernise them, Vivienne is a master in this field. Westwood worked historical factors into her
collection by using 17th-18th century original cutting principles and
modernising them.
The first major retrospective of her work was shown in 2004-2005
at the
Westwood accepted a DBE in the 2006 New Year's Honours List
"for services to fashion", She has won the award for British Designer
of the Year three times. In December 2003, she and the Wedgwood pottery company
launched a series of tea sets featuring her designs, testimony to her
versatility and maturity and the respect she has garnered, a far cry from Punk.