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Trash Fashion! Elise By Olsen on ephemeral messaging
Aside from snarky column inches on what’s hot and what’s not, one might imagine that the glossy pages of high-end style bibles are the prime location for insights into fashion writing. Not so, argues Elise By Olsen: look harder at the messaging of ephemera.

On the occasion of Milan Design Week 2025, KoozArch is proud to partner with the fashion brand MSGM and Berlin-based bookshop, do you read me? to host LESS NOISE. Amidst the frenzy, LESS NOISE carves out a space for reflection, focusing on the potency of publishing, through pivotal projects and intersectional conversations with designers, publishers, authors and editors who are redefining the field. Three conversations — under the titles Breaking Ground, The Laws of Attraction and Publish and Be Damned — will also be available as an audio series. In line with KoozArch’s ambition of making inspirational content accessible, we are delighted to share a series of edited excerpts from selected and critical publications.

Aside from snarky column inches on what’s hot and what’s not, one might imagine that the glossy pages of high-end style bibles — and their grainier tabloids counterparts — are the prime location for insights into fashion writing. Not so, argues Elise By Olsen: look harder at the messaging of ephemera.

Once, as a young aspiring fashionista I went to Paris Fashion Week for the first time. I was 15 and accompanied by my mother. The most coveted show was, for me, back then, Dior. I stepped up to the show’s designated venue, little me facing a colossal mirror-clad structure, by, I later learned, Bureau Betak. The structure was placed in the cour carrée, the iconic courtyard of the Louvre. The facade reflected this historic site in the heart of the city. Gasp! I was amazed. Camera flashes from street style photographers hit the mirror wall panels and bounced back at bloggers, influencers, and over-the-top industry figures like a large reflector. Editors-in-chief and celebrities passed by the crowds and went inside. To see and be seen. Somewhere between a panic attack and Stendhal syndrome, I was already amazed by the show, even before entering myself, and even before the models and clothes.

My mother waited outside in the cour carrée with a cigarette in her hand as I snuck into the show — without invitation. I ran through the entrance, passed the uptight black-tie security guards, into long tubes that made a tunnel, which opened into a large spaceship-like hall, with stepped seating. The guests were already seated as security ran after me. Go, go, go! The lights dimmed just as I hid in the back row, camouflaged behind someone’s large, lavish hat. Guards stepped out. Models stepped in, onto the runway through a sequence of arched apertures, wearing grandiose habits. Showtime! As soon as it was over the lights got back on. People left the premises in a hurry, likely to make it to the next one, or to get ahead of the taxi-lines that occupied the entire city during fashion week.

Now, I love a good fashion show, but it’s what happened next that gave me an epiphany and that ultimately inspired my current infinity-project. Tightly dressed staff — interns? — immediately started vacuuming the floor. I stepped out of the nook I was hiding in and started picking up every invitation left behind on the front rows. Eureka! The invitations were precious. Grey stock, soft and gummy-like texture. The Dior logo embossed. Artistically presented, with handwritten names on them. Mademoiselle this-and-that. One man’s trash, et cetera! I have no idea if people left the invitations behind deliberately, as an etiquette, a critical standpoint, or out of laziness, but they must have been expensive to make, I thought. And if I hadn’t picked them up they’d be thrown in the bin. These first rescued discards, show invites with strangers’ names on them, prompted my collection of fashion show remnants and remains that today makes up the collection of the International Library of Fashion Research in Oslo. What’s Nike without just doing it?

A library is both a symbol and reality of universal memory, as author Umberto Eco said. I founded the International Library of Fashion Research in 2020, as a specialised library focused on fashion-related print materials. I wanted these historical documents, from books and magazines, to show invitations (like my precious Dior invite) and press releases — things of both high artistic production to more rudimentary objects — to be available and accessible for everyone. With an increasing priority for everything digital, it felt crucial — perhaps more than ever — to preserve, document, and mediate fashion-focused printed matter, and to have it consolidated in one place. Thus, I wanted to create a meeting point for all kinds of researchers, professionals, and fashion enthusiasts worldwide to consult with this tactile material. As digitisation threatens the tradition of physical archiving, I wanted people to smell these objects, to touch them, to grapple with them with bare hands. To experience a slower, more thorough digest of information than what we are used to in this fast and accelerated digital climate. The archive as an antidote to our square eyes and ever shortening attention spans.

Commercial matter is the footprint of the industry, a powerful tool for understanding the industrial, historic, and symbolic evolution of fashion.

Now anyone can see and touch these show invites, which usually would have circulated within a very limited and gate kept milieu of VIP customers, buyers, and press. Created by brands’ communications departments, hence the high production value. Now, we don’t know exactly why they’d leave them behind on the front row, but my theory would be that they were originally created for commercial ends with a promotional function, and therefore rarely given the intellectual study or consideration that they might deserve. Sales materials are often dismissed and ignored. But fashion’s printed matter exists to promote or sell something, it creates allure and desire around products, and this is exactly what sets fashion apart from other industries. It’s also why I think we need to embrace such material: Commercial matter is the footprint of the industry, a powerful tool for understanding the industrial, historic, and symbolic evolution of fashion.

Let’s zoom out of the invitation-craze for a split second, and step into the library after closing hours. The aluminum shelves overflow with paper, reams and reams of them. I wanted to dust off, and bring these objects; fashion artifacts and cultural keepsakes, back to life, out of the trash. People across generations have all kinds of memories, anecdotes, and associations surrounding the objects that unfold while using and grappling with each piece. A library of oral stories! By activating the collection we ultimately prolong the objects’ lives. The archive is nothing without the bodies that touch them. We have magazines to take notes in and take notes from. We have books with dog ears. Promotional ephemera, rare objects, academic dissertations. Graphically experimental magazine covers for The Face in the ’80s (the ’90s were devoted to photographic play) and Nest Magazine. Cult-covers of Italian Vogue, Purple Fashion, Acne Paper. Visionaries pushing formats and materials, pushing the boundaries between publication and artifact. We collect (or rather beg for) these objects deliberately, by reaching out to graphic designers and agencies who have been practicing in — and around — the field of fashion, such as M/M (Paris), Peter Saville, and Marc Ascoli, to fill holes in the collection. In the library, the work of graphic designers, photographers, stylists, copywriters, and even printing houses are represented.

Ephemera dresses up in different guises. Plays around with packaging, logos, and signatures. A logo in fashion typically changes as quickly as the industry moves. New insignias and identities rebranded. Often, in tandem with a new creative director taking the helm of a fashion house. Creative directors want to solidify their stamp on the Maison, add their signature — signaling a new era. Celine without the accént, Saint Laurent without le Yves, a chunky all-caps Balenciaga. From sans to serif and back again. Let’s call it graphic evolution.

Text is an experimental tool in both fashion production and consumption — often mirroring dynamics found in industrial fashion.

Libraries and words go hand-in-hand, so how is text displayed in fashion? The interplay between fashion and text was interrogated in “Writing Clothes”, a recent exhibition at International Library of Fashion Research, curated by fashion scholars Laura Gardner & Jeppe Ugelvig. How is fashion constructed through text, language, and writing — in the past and present? Writing plays an important role in fashion, with the industry investing substantially in seasonally refreshing its visual messaging. By collecting printed matter and fashion ephemera — from press releases to Vivienne Westwood’s manifestos to commercial monthly magazines such as Vanity Fair — the library doubles to collect the historical and contemporary practices of fashion writing within. From the work of professional fashion critics (such as Diana Vreeland, Helen Hessel), through to the appearance of fashion criticism in the spaces of art publishing (art is fashion’s cultural alibi — or ally?), and poetic capacities in work by fashion studios, artists and research projects. Text is an experimental tool in both fashion production and consumption — often mirroring dynamics found in industrial fashion.

What becomes obvious, when looking at all this ephemera, is how fashion language has changed over time. Press releases, and fashion language in general, have become more ‘artified’, overly explained or conceptualised, fluffy, taking shape as efficient, already-written journalistic pieces, for the brands to control their image, and for the journalists or critics to simply copy and press ‘publish’. Recently, it is the fashion critic that has jumped ship and turned copywriter for brands for a living. So on one hand, they are two separate tasks sewn together; one, shape up and perfect sentences for brand benefits, and on the other, to translate the social meaning of clothes through written words, to unravel all that perfection. Is this dichotomy — between criticism and commerce — ever totally clear in the realm of fashion? What’s the difference between fashion coverage and fashion criticism? For both designer and critic, fashion writing is a process of mystification, capable of revealing and concealing things that the image cannot.

From clothes in words to words on clothes. Garments may also function as ephemeral objects and communicative tools. The wearability becomes secondary. Such as Junya Watanabe’s poetry t-shirt to the merch of the anonymous troll-cum-critic Steve Oklyn’s, utilising words and branding on clothes as a blatant critical gesture. Such work critically, and powerfully, interrogates the dynamic between word and garment. Clothes wearing words! And speaking of dressing up… More than writing I like to switch up fonts to change the glam, the drama, the rhythm in my own fashion writing, in the process. It’s like changing outfits, becoming someone else, dress up and down, designer cosplay! Which font are you?

This essay is an excerpt of “Trash Fashion!” by Elise By Olsen, originally published for Dinamo Typefaces as a guest essay on November 19th, 2024. It is available in its integral version at this link.

Bio

Elise By Olsen is an editor, curator and the founding director of International Library of Fashion Research, a cultural institution in Oslo, Norway. Elise also established and edited the youth culture magazine Recens Paper and the fashion commentary publication Wallet. For the past decade she has created exhibitions across contemporary art & fashion, served as consultant for brands & corporations, and lectured at international schools & institutions.

Published
08 Apr 2025
Reading time
12 minutes
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