Krew Couture
We Burned What color is your COVID? Dress for Sex-cess: Truth or Dare Good and Hot (left) / The Peacock Gown COVID Coat #2 and the Hydration Dress
By Tom Wachunas
“…Fashion is instant language.” – Miuccia Prada
EXHIBIT: Judi Krew: Hoard Couture, Where Art Meets
Fashion / Through October 6, 2021, at Massillon Museum STUDIO M / 121
Lincoln Way East in downtown Massillon, Ohio / 330.833.4061
https://www.massillonmuseum.org/
From Judi Krew’s exhibition statement: “…I embrace the mantra of reuse, repurpose, reconsider, and reimagine to guide the overall concept of each piece. What began nine years ago as a small scale sculptural dress serves to explore the idea of why we feel the need to hold onto “things”, this project has grown into an exploration rooted in problem solving…The original intent of Hoard Couture, to reduce an accumulation of things, has evolved over time into a series that sometimes looks back at our past and perhaps also forward to our future…”
Here’s an
eye-popping parade of femiquinns bedecked in a bodacious array of unconventional
materials. In this context, we can rightly regard Judi Krew’s works as not just
“fashion design”, but also as remarkable mixed-media sculptures.
On a purely formal
level, she consistently achieves an elegant balance of volume and mass animated
with electrifying patterns and textures, and all harmonized by an intoxicating
color sensibility.
On a conceptual
plane, I think there’s a kind of probity to many of these pieces that brings
new meaning to the idiomatic trope of wearing one’s heart on one’s sleeve. In
all of their astonishing intricacy of constructed details, these exquisitely
crafted assemblages are more than merely decorative. They’re declarative. I’m
confident that you would be well served to read the text placards accompanying
each piece, wherein Krew speaks about the history of her materials and their
ideological symbolism, as well as processing and resolving the technical
challenges in making a given piece actually wearable.
Fashion statements indeed. Here’s just a few
examples.
Dress for Sex-cess:
Truth or Dare is a stark white denim dress covered with handwritten
names or victim numbers of 358 women who filed sexual harassment claims against
Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein, Roy Moore, Bill Clinton, and Dr. Larry Nasser.
It’s a literally gripping document and, as Krew tells us, “…a walking, wearable
record of history to spark conversation and awareness.”
What color is
your COVID is a cape comprised of neckties with varying
configurations of circles, spots and dots, and attached toetags with numbers
written on them. Krew counted every single one of those circles, spots and dots,
totaling 44,935. But that number is just a starting point for grasping the
symbolism of this ingenious work. Once again, here’s where reading the placard
can be especially vital in appreciating the meticulous way Krew breaks down that
tally further into a sort of algorithm signifying the staggering and still
growing number of COVID victims in the U.S.
We Burned is
a beautiful and haunting remembrance of the deadly 2018 California Wildfire
season. That billowy bodice is a cluster of 2,000 hand-cut “leaves”, each one
burned or charred, and made from such things as greeting cards, photos, wrappers
and cartons – stuff easily lost to fire. Krew adds this poetic note: “…Sometimes
a leaf will fall off and float away, another lost soul returning to nature.”
In all, the
excellent physical installation of this collection exudes an inspiring
theatricality. You might easily imagine being backstage at a fashion show, or
standing in the wings while gazing at the line of “models” poised to strut and
swirl their fantastic finery onto the runway. A palpable sense of imminence.
Suddenly those static sculptures seem positioned to become kinetic entities in
space - a thrilling and provocative work of performance art.
MEET THE ARTIST
at the STUDIO M reception on Saturday, Aug. 28, from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m.
ALSO, MassMu will post a podcast interview with Judi Krew
on Tuesday, September 21, at noon.