A case of camp? Jay Leno’s 1958 Saab 93:

Following the tremendously popular Met exhibition, Heavenly Bodies, will be a new show on camp and its place in fashion.  Perhaps a cunning commentary on the camp nature of fashion influenced by Catholicism?   The show takes its bearings from Susan Sontag’s 1964 essay on the aesthetics of camp: https://faculty.georgetown.edu/irvinem/theory/Sontag-NotesOnCamp-1964.html.   I am not sure she…

Arsene Wegner and Max Scheler: sacrifice at the heart of the beautiful game

For those interested in football, Arsene Wenger needs no introduction.  A Frenchman who revolutionized the way football is played in Britain, Wenger is very Gallic.  For one thing, he looks great in clothes, but as the link to this video amply shows, he is quite the intellectual (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KPQREjBg9SM).   Especially interesting is his emphasis on…

Lacan on fashion’s dark psychology

Scotsman David Hume is probably fashion’s greatest philosophical ally (V&R, Chapter 1).  French psychoanalyst, and darling of the Left (though perhaps mistakenly: https://www.lawliberty.org/2018/01/17/jacques-lacan-conservative-icon/), Jacques Lacan is not a critic of fashion, exactly, but he does puncture the “holier than thou” posture of its advocates in today’s industry and media.   Fashion combines conformity and self-harm, he…

Jony Ive x Lord Shaftesbury

Separated by centuries, nonetheless the two Englishmen agree.  Speaking about Apple products, Apple’s chief of design says: “I believe that human beings sense care in the same way as we sense carelessness.”   Here Jony Ive invokes Shaftesbury’s idea of value tones.  Objects are constellations of discrete, discernible value qualities combined with symmetry.  Care is such…

Adam Smith’s aesthetics

What is a luxury face?  A London plastic surgeon speaks about the Beautiful Face, a composite of the requests he gets from clients.[1] The chin most desired by his clients belongs to Selina Gomez and the eyes to Keira Knightley: the nose the Duchess of Cambridge. About that famous nose, the surgeon, Dr. Julian Da…

Harmonizing Hume and Pope Francis

Harrods is thriving despite being somewhat aloof from the digital economy (https://www.businessoffashion.com/articles/global-currents/in-a-digital-world-harrods-bets-on-tradition?).  A business very much about a place, it is developing sales strategies from its traditions, relying on in-shop experiences rather than the rapidifcation and technoscience made possible by the digital.  Though a critic of luxury, Pope Francis would have to approve much of…