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Published on 31 October 2024

Awarded

Emilie Meldem

Womenswear collections 'Dumbalicious', 2008, 'I feel bling bling' and 'Mes amis les habits' 2005, 2007
(diploma work)

Fashion Design

Jury report

Beautiful and dumb
Em­i­lie Mel­dem was ho­n­oured for her grad­u­ate col­lec­tion 'Dum­b­a­li­cious' (2008) as well as two other col­lec­tions: 'I feel bling bling' and 'Mes amis les habits' (2005, 2007). Her pre­sen­ta­tion is out­stand­ing and com­pre­hen­sive. Clothes, look books and videos com­ple­ment each other per­fectly and cre­ate a mood that is hard to re­sist: a kind of light­heart­ed­ness cou­pled with child­like joy and im­pu­dence that, how­ever, is con­stantly bro­ken or is sub­jected to her irony. In the video, this at­ti­tude is ad­di­tion­ally un­der­scored with music. The look books are de­signed with a lot of care and love of de­tail. They some­times con­tain il­lus­tra­tions that re­in­force and ac­cen­tu­ate the en­ergy of the clothes.
'Dum­b­a­li­cious', the name of the col­lec­tion, plays – as do her two other col­lec­tions – with the clichés that often guide our so­ci­ety's gaze. As Em­i­lie Mel­dem her­self points out her 'naïve' start­ing point was the cliché of the 'woman who has to be dumb and beau­ti­ful, but is se­cretly clever in order to ma­nip­u­late peo­ple'. Her col­lec­tion plays with this fic­ti­tious fe­male role and un­der­mines, crit­i­cises and iro­nises it. This am­bigu­ous play with am­bi­gu­ity, close­ness and dis­tance is suc­cess­ful. The col­lec­tion (skirts, tops, dresses, hot pants, coat jacket and ear jew­ellery) is based on A and U shapes, and the pieces are made of jer­sey, poly­ester, satin poly­ester, satin, cot­ton or wool. What most of them share are typ­i­cal clas­sic dec­o­ra­tions such as pas­sa­menterie and em­broi­dery. The pas­sa­menterie is made of em­broi­dered rib­bons and stitched onto the clothes. Em­i­lie Mel­dem plays with tech­niques and makes the dec­o­ra­tions look de­lib­er­ately 'cheap' and, with the mo­tifs she uses, also 'more naïve'. Many of the cloth­ing items have laser-cut bor­ders that look like sil­hou­ettes and some­times like frills, or she uses other lasered shapes that are ap­pliquéd or used as an in­te­gral part of the clothes. These shapes speak ironic vol­umes. We can see rolling pins, ice cream, flow­ers, di­a­monds and whipped cream: the sweet life.
What all the cre­ations have in com­mon is a style in which fash­ion, music and graphic de­sign are mixed to com­ple­ment each other per­fectly. Em­i­lie Mel­dem man­ages to ex­tract an at­ti­tude from them that, at its best, feels like 'Lost in Trans­la­tion'.
Pa­trizia Criv­elli

Biography

Emilie Meldem
Born in
1983
Education
Modedesignerin