SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Enter your email address and subscribe to our free, weekly email for in-depth reportage on global fashion trends

Featured

Photo credit

Drawing Inspiration

Richard Gray illustration
Prada's wallpaper illustrated by James Jean
Erté's illustration
René Gruau's illustration
Fafi for M.A.C.
Hiroshi Tanabe illustration
Garance Doré illustration
Despite the popularity of digital design and photographic imaging, fashion illustration is back en vogue. No longer limited to glossy anthologies and nostalgic archives, the classic art form combines a modern touch with an archaic appeal.

Fashion illustration hasn't seen such mass-market appeal since the days of the illustrator greats. Erté's contributions to Harper's Bazaar in the early twentieth century left an indelible mark on the medium, as did René Gruau's depictions of '50s Parisian high fashion. But as Vogue's illustrated covers were replaced by the newfangled photographic images of the '30s, illustrators suddenly took a backseat.

With a relationship intrinsically tied to fashion fundamentals, it is no wonder designers are now clamoring to revisit the powerful partnership. Edgier artists such as Fafi and Takashi Murakami have paved the way with their modern drawings for M.A.C. and Louis Vuitton, while Prada's spring/summer '08 collaboration with James Jean was entirely inspired by the artist's surreal sketches. Top design houses such as Agent Provocateur, Louis Vuitton, Anna Sui, Clinique, Alexander McQueen, Mulberry and Balenciaga have now teamed up respectively with illustrators Richard Gray, Julie Verhoeven, Hiroshi Tanabe and François Berthoud. This marriage of mediums promotes the artists while reinvigorating the monotony of photographic images.

No stranger to the world of fashion illustration, Paris-based illustrator and blogger Garance Doré has her own cult following of fashion insiders. Doré credits the artistic inspiration generated between a designer and illustrator as the catalyst for the renewed interest in fashion illustration. "An illustrator's perspective can add a whole new world of references for a brand that is very individual," she remarks. "For example, take François Berthoud or Kareem Iliya who illustrate fashion, but through a very personal filter. I love to think that the illustrator's interpretation of the designer's fashion brings new inspiration to the designer so that they feed off each other."

While the jury is still out on a Vogue revamp, fashion glossies such as Wallpaper, Dazed and Confused and Pop are already taking the lead with illustrated covers and fashion spreads. This new incarnation of illustration challenges the way we have come to view fashion, while promoting the artistic aesthetic of a bygone era.

—Kyle Landman

JCR on Twitter

Blogs | Fashion Wire

  • Daily News
    M&S sales up almost 3%, West End will capitolize on London Fashion Week fever, New protests for Bangladesh Textiles, Madonna in new Vuitton ads...
    July 1st, 2009
  • Daily News
    The world's most fashionable cities, Beyoncé and Tina Knowles' Sasha Fierce, consumer confidence grows in June, Permira and Valentino renogotiate debt...
    July 1st, 2009
  • Daily News
    Quelle gets loan guarantee from Berlin, 80,000 expected at Bread and Butter show, Glastonbury Festival sees the return of L.L. Bean and Levis, Korea's first luxury brand...
    June 30th, 2009
  • Jason's Dispatches
    n1371632332_477417_7860494.jpg
    News on my trip last week to South Africa is embargo-ed. What I can say it that it involved charity and it was one of the most profound weeks of my life.
    June 29th, 2009
  • Daily News
    Charlotte Ronson grows up, Milan recap, Paris menswear comes to a close, ASOS profit doubles
    June 29th, 2009

Already a member? Login
Join us - Sign Up