MODASpring 2013
Transcription
MODASpring 2013
MODA Spring 2013 MODA CO-EDITORS-IN-CHIEF Rachel Reid & Caroline Wang MODA Staff 2013 EDITORIAL BOARD PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Charlotte Smith LAYOUT EDITOR Rachel Scheinfeld FEATURES EDITORS Sara Hupp & Alexandra McInnis STYLE EDITOR Tara Anantharam BUSINESS MANAGER Grace Lin PR MANAGER Swara Saraiya WRITERS RJ Gitter, Sindhu Gnanasambandan, Kathryn Mitchell, Lena Sparks PHOTOGRAPHERS Cathryn Jijon, Vivian Wan, Ivy Zhang STYLISTS Nina Coomes, Maura Connors, Lyn Han MAKEUP ARTIST Lucie Fama MODELS Amanda Block, Aixin Chen, Alexa Daugherty, Trisha Gupta, Erik Landry, Alexandra Katarina Lee, Renata Horowitz, Mesmer Rivers, Darrian Robinson, Emma Mahdieh Tehrani, Caroline Wegner LAYOUT TEAM Annina Christensen, Lauren Dietzel, Zelda Mayer, Cathay Zhao LETTER FROM THE EDITORS You are never too young to start developing your individual style. Take a look at the photos above if you’re unconvinced. Our spring issue celebrates individuality and the people who are brave enough to embrace it. Bill Murray graced us with his quirk in an interview about the importance of perfecting your own style in Hollywood (pg.18). His admiration of one-of-a-kind director Wes Anderson inspired us to write our own ode to The Whimsical World of Wes (p.20). Terry Richardson has changed the way we see fashion with his harsh dismissal of all that is subtle; photographer Cathryn Jijon captured his hit-and-run style in A Tribute to Terry (pg. 39). Besides paying tribute to our favorite, daring icons, we interviewed one of our own: First-year Renata Horowitz surprised us with some serious life perspective when we interviewed her about her job at Vogue magazine (pg. 25). Working as Co-Editors of Moda has given us both the opportunity to express our individual styles throughout our college years—years that see us change and evolve the most. As we pass the magazine on to new editors, we feel confident that the magazine will continue to grow and thrive as an outlet for you to do what comes most naturally—being yourself. — Rachel & Caroline 2 MODA Spring 2013 MODA TABLE OF CONTENTS 04 MODA LOVES: Rachel and Caroline share their top picks of the season 06 Classic Mexican comfort foods with a twist from A Toda Madre in Geneva, IL 06 MUNCH WITH MODA: The top 5 up-and-coming restaurants in Chicago this year 08 10 FASHION @ UOFC: Exploring individual style at the University of Chicago THE DECLARATION OF FASHION: How clothing symbolizes more than just beauty 12 CHRISTIAN SIRIANO: An inside scoop at the life and work of the Project Runway winner 14 18 STUDENT DESIGNER PROFILES: Meet three designers from this year’s MODA Fashion Show BILL MURRAY: The King of Deadpan talks about working with Wes Anderson 20 22 WES ANDERSON: A profile of Wes Anderson’s winning style Spotlight: Renata Horowitz 22 VOGUE GONE ROGUE: First-year Renata Horowitz wears Madewell’s Spring Collection 28 32 UBallet Company at U of C 32 36 BARE NECESSITIES: A vision of black and white DANCE AWAY: UBallet models clothing from Chicago boutiques A TRIBUTE TO TERRY: Inspired by the work of acclaimed photographer Terry Richardson. CORRECTION: In our Summer 2012 issue, we mis-credited a sketch on page 10 as a design by Francisca Sondjaja. The design should have been credited to Wendy Wei. MODA Spring 2013 3 MODAloves In the Moment with Moda Co-Editors-in-Chief, Rachel Reid and Caroline Wang, share their current style favorites Rachel Loves... HELLO GIGGLES: Queen of crafts and cupcakes, Zooey Deschanel, teamed up with two up-and-coming bloggers to create this girl-centric, contributor-friendly blog. The site’s topics include everything from advice posts to frappuccino recipes, but my personal favorite section is the one entirely devoted to livecams of baby animals. SEE BY CHLOE AT MADEWELL: Chloe chose the perfect brand to team up with and market this new collection, which puts a classic finish on bold spring prints. This roll-top clutch will be my first splurge of the season. CATBIRD: This Brooklyn-based company has all the charm of Williamsburg and almost none of the pretension. Catbird features local designers and sells everything from engagement rings to soap on their adorable, interactive Web site. 4 MODA Spring 2013 MODAloves Caroline Loves... SWASH: This London-based brand combines digital prints with handdrawn and painted images to create my very favorite iPhone cases. These cases are not only fun to look at, but their unique texture also provides comfort and a good grip. AROMA WORKSHOP: While studying abroad in India, I discovered the benefits of using fragrance oil over alcoholbased perfume. The oils have a purer scent, while also providing a longer-lasting smell. Not to mention, alcohol can be irritating for some people’s skin. Given my new obsession with finding the perfect fragrance, I was happy to find Aroma Workshop in Chicago, where you can mix different oils to create your own, unique scent. CHANEL SKY LINE: This limited edition color first appeared on the Spring-Summer 2012 Haute Couture runway. The color is a beautiful periwinkle, with a pearl-like frosty finish. I have never seen a nail polish with a comparable shine. It always scares me when cosmetics are “limited edition”; better stock up before you never ever see it again. MODA Spring 2013 5 MODAreviews 1 Munch with Moda Spring is the time to venture out of Hyde Park and visit the shops and cafés around Chicago. When you get hungry, be sure to get a table at one of these recently-opened restaurants for fantastic food and a perfect ending to your day out. text by kathryn mitchell photography courtesy of restaurants 6 1. Bar Toma 2. Perennial Virant Right across from Water Tower Place, Bar Toma grabbed the perfect spot to lure hungry shoppers. It has the vibe of an authentic Italian restaurant, with a bar, a case displaying gelato and the smell of pizza wafting out from the kitchen. Sitting in the front section, near the windows, offers you the perfect spot to people-watch. The menu is filled with Italian specialties, including cold and hot antipasti, salads and pizzas. The arancini was perfect to share as a starter, and the pizza is about as close to real Italian pizza as you will find in the Windy City (the Power Pizza is my favorite). And while I have never been here for brunch, I will definitely be coming back. Expect to Spend: ~$20 per person (opened Nov 2011) 110 East Pearson Street, Mag Mile This one is more expensive, but if you need a dressy dinner spot, or a future Restaurant Week idea, then this one is for you. The space is chic and trendy, and the dishes are a modern and fresh take on American standards. The wine and cocktail menu is fairly extensive while meat dishes comprise a major portion of the food menu. This is great for some, but evidently limiting for other diners. The whitefish is a particularly good alternative, but vegetarians might have trouble finding appealing entrées. I was disappointed with the desserts, but if you’re already in Lincoln Park, you may as well go out afterwards and forgo the dessert for after-dinner drinks. Expect to spend: ~$30 per person (opened May 2011) 1800 North Lincoln Avenue, Lincoln Park MODA Spring 2013 2 MODAreviews 3 4 5 1. The Mozzarella Tasting at Bar Toma is a delicious Italian starter. Photo courtesy of Galdones Photography 2. Perennial Virant’s chic interior provides a beautiful setting for a special night out. Photo courtesy of Perennial Virant 3. RPM has a classic black and white interior. Photo courtesy of RPM 4. A must-try at Nellcôte: any pizza with a fried egg on top. Photo courtesy of Nellcôte 5. For food and drinks outside of the city, visit A Toda Madre in Geneva. Photo courtesy of A Toda Madre 3. RPM Italian Restaurant RPM opened with some lackluster reviews, but appears to have listened to critics, and has morphed into a perfect mix of contemporary and comfort Italian dining. The sleek décor makes it hard to determine if you’ve just entered a nightclub or a restaurant, but the lines are clean, and the restaurant has a classic elegance through the all black and white theme. Located just a block over from Hubbard Street, RPM has a great location that can be easily reached by public transportation. The dishes are perfect to share. Ordering a few smaller dishes and a pasta or main, and then passing them around, make the price very reasonable. If you still have room for dessert, try the Tartufo. Expect to spend: ~$25 per person (opened February 2012) 52 West Illinois Street, River North 4. Nellcôte This hidden spot in the West Loop opened just a few doors down from the renowned Girl and the Goat. However, the two restaurants could not be more different. The outdoor patio, right on Randolph, is nice when the weather warms up. The interior is minimalist with high seating, low lighting and an abundance of hanging chandeliers. Their specialties are the small plates, perfect for sharing around the table. The eclectic pizzas are Nellcôte’s standout items—who would have thought that an egg on a pizza could work so well? They also have various unique cocktails for the 21 and over crowd. Expect to spend: ~$25 per person (opened March 2012) 833 West Randolph, West Loop 5. A Toda Madre Feeling adventurous? Want to get out of the city? Look no further than out in the western ’burbs. You can either drive (about an hour outside the city by car) or take the Metra (from Ogilvie it takes you out there in about 45 minutes). A Toda Madre is rather small, so reservations are a must, but the restaurant has a vibrant and homey feel, trendy but not over the top, and food that tastes straight out of a home kitchen. This is Mexican comfort food made modern and slightly more upscale. The guacamole rivals any in the city. They do not serve very many vegetarian options, so be sure to go with carnivores for the optimum experience. The dessert menu pales in comparison to the dinner menu, but all in all, the dinner will be more than enough to satisfy you. Expect to spend: ~$20 per person (opened March 2012) 416 West State Street, Geneva, IL MODA Spring 2013 7 MODAfeatures Fashion @ UChicago Sara Hupp sets out to discover the ins and outs of the fashion culture at the University of Chicago text by sara hupp photography courtesy of MODA Chicago D ue purely to the fact that MODA exists on the University of Chicago campus, one might argue that there is a demonstrated interest in fashion on the part of the student body. In an atmosphere chock-full of academic pressures, surely students can take respite in the sphere of the sartorial, right? Upon closer examination, however, it’s not quite that simple. To truly understand fashion’s place at UChicago, we need not step into the closet of the average student but rather approach the topic as if in the classroom. Prior to engaging in meaningful discussion as to the role of clothing in the life of the student, we must have some idea of what exactly is meant by “fashion.” Is it that which is considered “trendy” by those in the professional field? Is it simply the pieces of fabric that we use to clothe ourselves? Or is it some way of expressing to the outside world who we each are individually? Fashion at the University of Chicago—in truth, it means many things to many people, 8 MODA Spring 2013 MODAfeatures PERSONAL STYLE UChicago students add accessories to their outfits in the Chicago winter, as featured on the MODA Chicago blog and to some, it means nothing at all. But perhaps that’s the beauty of sartorial self-expression here at UChicago: not knowing what the term means to the person standing next to you, you’re free to engage (or not engage) with “fashion” as you personally see fit. In one way, choices of clothing and accessories can—in the somewhat “cliché” sense—be used to express to others who we are or what we’re feeling on any given day. They are means of implicitly telling people,“I don’t submit myself to the mainstream” or “I’ve been in the Reg all night, so please don’t bother me.” In a different sense, engaging with the sartorial is a way of maintaining a connection with the world beyond that which is bounded by South Ellis Avenue and University Avenue. Just as you’re leafing through MODA right now, burying yourself in the glossy pages of a fashion magazine can offer an escape from Durkheim reading and never-ending problem sets. Beyond this simple respite from the tangible pressures of the daily grind, though, taking time to lose yourself in fashion provides a much-needed opportunity to think about none other than you—what you wish to convey to others (if anything at all) through your style choices. And what about those who look at clothing simply for its utilitarian value, devoid of any stylistic merits it could potentially possess? There is certainly nothing wrong with that, and in a place like UChicago, no one will look down upon you for choosing to not engage with fashion. That may just be the crux of what exactly fashion is at the University of Chicago: It’s personal. Opinions about style and its possible value are as diverse as the students (not to mention their choices of clothing) that comprise the campus community. Even after much thought, making a broad, all-encompassing statement about the role of fashion at UChicago is impossible, simply because no two students are exactly alike. What is common among all students, though, is an unparalleled desire to make use of their intellect and sense of creativity—whether or not fashion has place in that is up to the you. MODA Spring 2013 9 MODAfeatures The Declaration of Fashion Through an exploration of what our clothing truly means and how that meaning came to be, RJ Gitter pushes us to see our fashion in a new light. text by rj gitter photography courtesy of sofeminine.co.uk C 10 onsider, for a moment, language. When we say that prose is beautiful, we’re saying that it looks good on a page, that it sounds good to say aloud, to read in your head—but that’s not all we’re saying. The prose, poetry, comment in class or any spoken word: in order to be beautiful, they’ve all got to mean something, too, because ultimately, beauty is derived from tracing the paths of association, from the phonic contour of a word to the thing it represents, from the ebb and flow of a sentence to the scene it carves into the sand and washes away—because any poet out there stringing together words in the order that looks and sounds the most beautiful without regard to meaning, is not making poetry. The same goes for fashion. It’s a language that is generally understood by everyone, spoken by those who care—but there are no words; the base units of representation are shredded jeans, gossamers of bleached hair and metallic green eye shadow. But the terms of use remain unchanged: an article of clothing isn’t cool or beautiful because it looks good, though it probably does. Rather, the clothing has meaning that can be traced back from the loose hanging strands of intertwined fibers to the loom that wove the first of its kind, its original purpose followed by the context surrounding the garment up to the present. In the same way that a writer MODA Spring 2013 should be preoccupied with the denotations and connotations of the individual words or turns of phrases he uses, so should a student of fashion with the meanings and contexts of articles of clothing or styles—otherwise how does he hope to formulate sentences of articles and accessories, paragraphs of outfits, to transmit through his work a need, desire, feeling, or any kind of information? The vast majority of the clothing we wear today were originally valued exclusively for their utility—as insulation against the elements, or to meet the social requirement of clothing—but over time, in its association with its utility, the article of clothing is linked to new meaning, the set of values or feelings surrounding the utility. The article comes to be not simply associated with that new meaning, but to represent it, becoming a symbol for it. The way in which an article of clothing can come to mean something other than its physical shape or color, to have meaning apart from its utility, is what I like to call the process of abstraction. A given article of clothing can undergo abstraction multiple times, assuming new utilities and relinquishing them in favor of new abstracted meanings. Fashion, then, is to make a statement using a vocabulary of abstracted meanings—to construct a style using articles of clothing, or articles of clothing out of stylistic elements—and to relate it back to oneself. MODAfeatures Take, for example, the trench coat. Designed at the turn of the 19th century by Thomas Burberry, it was submitted to the United Kingdom War Office as a raincoat for army officers. The design was concerned exclusively with utility—cut from a tightly woven material patented by Burberry as gabardine, featuring d-rings for storage and gun and storm flaps to keep the water out; all this while preserving enough mobility for the wearer to clamber up out of the muddy trenches and make a wild dash across no man’s land. In fact, Burberry’s designs were so durable and so insulating that the coats meaning is abstracted. The social pressure to participate in the war effort, even on the home front, caused the coats to be admired, not for their ability to insulate a human body while allowing for better mobility, but because they represented active involvement in the war effort. In an alternative and more enduring abstraction, the coats became symbols of the disciplined masculinity of the trained British soldier, and, in their great utility, symbols of utility itself, especially as manifest in the male body. Either way, the utility was washed away, and replaced with a new, abstracted meaning. TRENCH TRANSFORMATION The changing form of the Burberry coat overtime. became widespread throughout the entire military hierarchy, and soldiers developed emotional attachments to the coats, weaving modern folklore around the seemingly indestructible garments. And here’s where the process of abstraction occurs. Over the course of World War I, images of British soldiers in long, belted, what had come to be called “trench coats” were disseminated throughout the UK, and young veterans returned home, unwilling to part with the coat that had delivered them from the inclement battle conditions. The British civilian population, in their removed exposure to the coats, began to understand them less as a standard issue military jacket, and more as a symbol of laying down one’s life in the trenches, for England; thus the Unfortunately, there has always been, though I think now more than ever, an inclination to wear clothing in a way that is so abstracted that the garment does not mean anything at all—for the meaning of a military jacket to be so far removed from its original utility that to wear it doesn’t make any statement other than that you like how it looks. And I’d posit that, just as the aforementioned poet isn’t making poetry by sticking together words that are no more than nice sounds, you’re not dressing yourself fashionably just by putting on things that you think look good together. So, I’ll ask you, next time you put on your low-profile vans or riding boots before tramping off to your Bio lab, to think about where they came from, and what it means for you to be wearing them. MODA Spring 2013 11 MODAinterviews Christian Siriano From Project Runway to Fashion Highway text by sindu gnanasambandan photography by vivian wan A lthough up-and-coming fashion designer, Christian Siriano, has largely retired his catch phrase “fierce,” popularized while he competed on Bravo’s hit series, Project Runway, it serves as the perfect word to describe his persona. He is 27 years old and hitting the fashion front hard; Siriano works tirelessly to put his name, face and one-of-a-kind personality out there for the public to soak up and love. At his trunk show in Lincoln Park, hosted by eDrop-off, he expressed his personable and quirky personality to the many guests who came to see Siriano and his designs. The room was swimming with women (and men) excited about his edgy yet wearable designs. Racks of clothing lined the space and the centerpiece was overflowing with chunky, elegant pumps. He offered advice on how to go about making purchases. “I think the best thing is you have to get your statement pieces,” he says. “It is easy to build a wardrobe around things that are ex- 12 MODA Spring 2013 MODAinterviews “Every season you have to push yourself and try to develop things that you like and take risks.”—Christian Siriano >>TRUNK SHOW Siriano mingles with Corri-McFadden at a Siriano trunk show in Chicago, hosted by eDrop-Off in November 2012. citing, whether that is a statement pair of shoes or a really cool, interesting jacket.” When asked about his inspirations for his designs, Siriano claims that they are “anything and everything” that do the job. For next season, he is planning to travel to Russia, to create a “military Russian” collection. Siriano studied design at American InterContinental University in London and interned with Vivienne Westwood as well as Alexander McQueen. Through his studies and internship experiences, he began cultivating his own personal style. “When I was in college in fashion, I dressed crazy,” he says. “I would wear all kinds of really interesting things and just kind of went for it.” His public identity as a fashion designer debuted season four of Project Runway. As the series’ youngest winner to date, Siriano was only 21 when he starred on the show and entered the industry. Since then, not only has he sold his designs at Neiman Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue, but he has also teamed up with brands such as LG Electronics, Starbucks and Victoria’s Secret to create Siriano-designed products for a wide range of consumers. He even designed a line of pumps, flats and handbags for Payless ShoeSource, allowing women with a smaller budget to access his designs. Siriano also continues to sell himself through the first medium that put him on the map: television and pop culture. Since Project Runway, he has made appearances on Bravo’s Make Me a Supermodel, ABC’s Ugly Betty, and even appeared in Estelle’s music video for “No Substitute Love”. Siriano says his success stems from enthusiasm for whatever he is working on. “You just have to kind of know that the most important thing is to not let anyone else get in your way,” he says. “You are your own worst enemy when you are young and my thing was that I was always really excited about what I was doing and if somebody didn’t like it, I always tried to just move forward.” Siriano’s motto and motivations can be summarized by the title of his 2009 book, Fierce Style: How to be your most Fabulous Self. All that being said, the flashing lights have not gotten to him yet. “He is very level, down to earth, and relatable,” says Cori McFadden, owner of eDrop-off and friend of Sirano. For instance, Siriano’s “Major Moments of 2012” Tumblr post included the opening of his first retail store in New York City and dressing three nominees at the Emmys, but also that he adopted a new puppy named Bear. This sentiment is a perfect example of Siriano’s character—a brand of personality that has met his fans halfway and has ultimately made him a fashion trail blazer. MODA Spring 2013 13 MODAreviews Born to Runway The annual MODA spring fashion show is one of the biggest fashion events for UChicago students. Three of this year’s designers share their inspirations and processes behind what they plan to showcase on the runway. 14 text by lena sparks photography by vivian wan & ivy zhang MODA Spring 2013 MODAreviews I Lily Lai f anyone is thinking about how to make you look better in a dress, it’s Lily Lai. She designs to flatter the shape of the body effortlessly using the movement of fabric. Materials like chiffon, georgette and other fabrics similar in ‘flowiness’ are key to the success of her big, down-to-the-floor gowns, which are made to make girls look naturally taller and slimmer. “I want them all to be princesses!” she gushes with an easy likability. Indeed, her effortless dresses and bright personality make it easy to forget the intensity of the work behind a collection. “Bending over the table for hours is tiring and frustrating,” she says, “but I have to keep going. The end is the inspiration.” Knowing that her efforts have a meaningful outcome – that they will be a reflection of her own artistic vision – is a major motivation for the designer. Up until her recent purchase of a body form, she was her own mannequin, and she constantly pushes the envelope on what she believes to be the biggest obstacle – her own skill set. Through all the hard work, she is simply happiest when she is sewing. MODA Spring 2013 15 MODAreviews A veteran of the 2012 MODA Spring Show, Mary Ella Simmons returns to the catwalk with a collection in full bloom. The Florida native is all about color but strikes a balance with her streamlined designs. This year, her crop of silky dresses echoes the structural and artistic beauty of flowers, with iris, tulip, calla lily, orchid, and peony-inspired designs. Like her collection, the designer herself is a tour-de-force of personality and warmth—but also a keen observer of the subtleties of nature that inspire her. “The tulip is a bright but not offensive red; the orchid white with purple,” she says. “I like simpler things.” Vibrant but clean, her designs indeed keep to an incredibly wear- 16 MODA Spring 2013 Mary Ella Simmons able and down-to-earth aesthetic philosophy. What less to expect from a designer who has gained experience over the years by making her own clothes? Since early days of spurning store-bought clothing and curling cardboard into a crayon costume one year for Halloween, Simmons has always taken charge of how she dressed. The pleasure of designing is, for her, the ability to make exactly what she wants to wear, to control exactly how it will turn out down to the last detail. She likes to work freely without a pattern, often beginning to make a garment from the point of inspiration. It’s a break from academic life, allowing her to use a completely different part of her brain. “It’s just problem solving,” she explains. “Designing is happy stress.” MODAreviews Harrison Yu H arrison Yu isn’t afraid of a little collaboration. Last year for his MODA collection, he spread production out, over a long table in the middle of his residence hall, inevitably attracting the interest – and the help – of many fellow students. This interactive style is in fact part of his larger design process, one that is dynamic and intentionally unpredictable. Claiming to be “not much of a drawer,” Yu rarely sticks to an original sketch and takes a sculptural approach to making clothes. “I start with a very loose concept in mind and change it as I go,” he explains. Because of the limitations of the fabric, a design will change radically from its inception as a sketch to its completion as a garment. Working from the quality of the material itself, Yu tries to capture something that is common and transform it into something elegant and wearable. This year, his collection uses airy fabrics such as tulle to channel the color and movement of smoke. Yu further strives to meet this artistic innovation with a leveling pragmatism. Whereas he finds that “too many designers these days focus too much on being avant-garde,” he always tries to keep the wearer in mind, to make clothes that are easy to live in. Inspired by the beauty of daily life, Yu makes clothes for the everyday. MODA Spring 2013 17 MODAinterviews MODAInterviews BILL MURRAY on being...Bill Murray Murray discusses his acting style, Wes Anderson, and his role on the Anderson team text by charlotte smith B ill Murray is the king of deadpanexpression comedy, and more specifically, one of the recurring stars of the films of celebrated American director/screenwriter, Wes Anderson. In a conversation about his relationship with Anderson’s work, Murray shared his personal philosophy on acting, as well as what he believes makes Anderson an original. Anderson is known for his consistency in working with the same actors and crew. Murray joined the Anderson team for Rushmore in 1998, having not seen Anderson’s first film, Bottle Rocket. “It turned out that [Anderson] tried to get me to be in Bottle Rocket, but my agent didn’t want to send me to the screen of a first-time producer,” Murray says. “Back then, [Anderson] was a college graduate with a first-time script!” 18 MODA Spring 2013 Ironically, Murray says he now “has the largest collection of Bottle Rocket cassettes in the world because people just keep sending them. “ I probably [have] 5 or 6 of them!” he says. As to how he ended up finally getting involved in Anderson’s work with Rushmore, Murray admitted that he was initially unenthusiastic when the script was recommended to him. However, he changed his mind after looking at the meticulous script. “Most people can’t write the kinds of descriptive instructions that are in Wes’ screenplays,” he says. “Everything he wanted to do was there.” From a viewer’s perspective, Anderson’s quirky writing seems to fit perfectly with Murray’s comedic style of acting. Murray feels a particular connection with Anderson’s scripts when bringing the words to life. MODAinterviews “When a screenplay is no longer a piece of paper with words, it enters the physical dimension,” he says. “The thing that an improviser like myself can do is make an impact unaccounted for in the script.” How that impact is achieved, Murray explains, is through timing. “An actor feels, creates and ends a scene either with his voice, or with his body.” For certain acting, Murray believes that focusing on the movements of the body is a crucial starting point. “It may not appear so, but my acting style is very physical,” he says. “I start from the body out. Mind and body are one…your emotions can’t work unless you’re present in your body. And because I’m available in my body, the same way [Anderson’s] stuff is different and quirky, it works.” Indeed, aside from his scripts, Wes Anderson’s film-making has been noted as method- ical and full of cinematographic details. According to Murray, timing is as essential for Anderson’s camera as it is for the acting in his scenes. “The camera moves as the silent eye—and [Anderson] does a lot of cutting with the camera,” Murray explains. Usually most of the cutting is done on a sound cut such as a spoken word or a door slam in conjunction with the visual cuts, which Murray believes bring a truly unique quality to the films. Thus it’s through Anderson’s witty scripts and deliberate filming, combined with Murray’s personal style as an actor, that the Anderson-Murray talent works as one. Bill Murray’s latest role as Franklin Delano Roosevelt in Hyde Park on Hudson (2012) has received phenomenal reviews. As for Murray and Anderson, their next project is Grand Budapest Hotel, set for release in 2014. MODA Spring 2013 19 MODAfeatures THE WHIMSICAL WORLD OF WES Wes Anderson has gone from oddball indie film producer to one of the most talked about names in contemporary cinema. Alexandra McInnis looks into the unique visual style that defines his current popularity. text and illustration by alexandra mcinnis I s the world finally starting to “get” Wes Anderson? In terms of widespread critical acclaim, the past seventeen years of the Texas filmmaker’s career have yielded hits (Rushmore, The Royal Tenenbaums) and misses (The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, The Darjeeling Limited). His distinctive and offbeat film-making style has been hailed as unique and groundbreaking as well as derided as self-conscious and contrived, depending on the film. However, Moonrise Kingdom, Anderson’s touching 2012 film about young love on a small New England island, is his highest-grossing and best-received movie to date. In wake of this recent success, Anderson is currently working on The Grand Budapest Hotel, set for release in 2014. Whatever it is that accounts for the favorable or unfavorable responses to 20 MODA Spring 2013 Anderson’s work is elusive. It’s never the acting; his films are consistently filled with brilliant actors, ranging from Gene Hackman to Cate Blanchett to Tilda Swinton, and of course there’s always the token Bill Murray role. But Anderson’s commitment to creating a unique and strong visual statement is infallible, and unarguably distinguishes him as one of the most visually innovative filmmakers since Jean-Luc Godard. To understand Wes Anderson’s visual style is not just a matter of discussing color palettes and set design. One must first envision a world where children are wiser than their parents, and where characters respond to compelling news in a deadpan manner. Convention has been thrown upside down, but it is there that the logic to Anderson’s style begins to arise. We see his MODAfeatures deliberate, fetishistic approach to objects where each mug or pair of scissors is shown to have its own nail on the wall to hang on, or a glove receives a special alteration diagram after its owner ends up with a severed finger. Every frame is meticulously shot, with an unprecedented attention to detail. Indeed it seems borderline obsessive compulsive when two actors’ shirts in The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou color coordinate with a random van in the corner of the frame. Surely producing the animated film adaptation of Roald Dahl’s The Fantastic Mr. Fox must have been a dream come true for Anderson, since the digital animation enabled total control over every visual aspect of each frame. Regardless, the penchant for objects and details provides a sense of order in movies centered on the strange and chaotic lives of unfulfilled people. Divorces wreck families, children and parents run away from home, and disappointed characters embark on tumultuous journeys of redemption, all softened by muted tones and a fuzzy lens. Despite the gentleness, the element of surprise comes into play through primary colors or even cultural juxtapositions. It’s scenes where Margot Tenenbaum wears a Lacoste polo dress while sitting in her bedroom adorned with zebra wallpaper and African maks, or the sleekly-attired Whitman brothers in The Darjeeling Limited ride a dingy yet ornate train through India that constantly lend complexity and interest to Anderson’s films. For all that is deliberate, Anderson chooses to leave his work undefined by any specific time period. Moonrise Kingdom is set in the 1960s, but in general the settings and props of his films transcend any particular era in modern history. Margot wears a fur coat and Hermès handbag, and Rushmore’s Max Fischer sports a prep-school jacket, but all these clothes could equally be from last season or 30 years ago. The timelessness creates a sense of continuity, and the notion that all these tales could arise at any given year. The leading ladies in Anderson’s films incite wild passions and love triangles with the men they share the screen with, but for films that are so focused on the image it is interesting how unremarkable the female characters appear. Think of Gwenyth Paltrow with her droopy kohl-rimmed eyes and somber expression in The Royal Tenenbaums, or Angelica Huston, who is majestic but graying. Similarly Olivia Williams played a pleasant-looking but unglamorous kindergarten teacher in Rushmore, yet she inspired an all-out war between Bill Murray’s and Jason Schwartzmen’s characters. The Life Aquatic featured a barefaced Cate Blanchett wearing frumpy safari clothes that looked like they were just pulled out of an Army Surplus store, but she appealed—pregnant nonetheless—to characters played by Bill Murray and Owen Wilson. Despite the layers of artifice, the romantic interests may reveal the core of Anderson’s films to be hinged on the interior of his characters, rendering his otherwise elusive films relatable to their viewers. It seems unlikely that Anderson’s current success is due to pandering to more mainstream cinema or capitalizing on the current pervasiveness of indie culture. Rather, moviegoers are realizing that Anderson’s films contain a visual experience you can’t get anywhere else. The irresistible charm of his work has the power to transport us to imaginary worlds yet grounds us in everyday human conflicts and relationships. We think it’s a winning formula. MODA Spring 2013 21 MODAfeatures VOGUE gone ROGUE First-year Renata Horowitz gives us an insider’s perspective on just how many things are more important than working at Vogue. Horowitz models clothing from Madewell, in honor of Madewell’s new Chicago downtown location. text by rachel reid photography by rachel reid makeup by rachel scheinfeld R enata Horowitz stumbled upon a job at Vogue magazine the way that any other teenage girl might stumble upon a decent prom dress or an especially great hair day. As a sophomore in high school, Horowitz was taking pictures of her friends in Central Park for a class assignment when she was approached by a complete stranger and offered a career in fashion. “While I was taking the pictures for class, a shoot that involved my leotard-clad dance friends at Central Park in the snow, a woman came up and asked about the shoot and then asked me to work for her,” she says. 22 MODA Spring 2013 MODAfeatures MODA Spring 2013 23 24 MODA Spring 2013 The first job she was offered was with a major, New York-based photo production company that has collaborated with household names, from Annie Leibovitz to Ryan McGinley. “I had never thought about production, but was overwhelmed by the opportunity,” she says. “I then began working for her close to four to five days a week and then spent my summer living with her in Montauk, back and forth between shoots. It was on a shoot affiliated with [the production company] that I first met my current boss at Vogue, who worked in international fashion accessories and wanted to introduce me to a different side of the fashion world.” Horowitz continues to work mainly on editorial shoots, but now has her own Condé Nast credit card, and every advantage that goes along with working for Vogue. “Vogue is so incredibly fast-paced, and they have an excessive budget which affords much room for creativity,” she says. “They have the money 25 to do what they want, whenMODA they Spring want2013 to and hire as many hands necessary to make their visions exist.” With these small (even if seemingly big) facts about Renata, one might imagine her dressed in designer clothes, with apathetic eyes and Anna Wintour-sized sunglasses balanced on her nose. In reality, the New Yorkbred first-year is a petite 18-year-old (she hardly fit into the sample sizes Madewell sent us for her shoot), with hazel eyes, a stud in her nose and a small shaved spot hidden under her wild brown hair. She dresses herself in thrift store-finds and handmade accessories. She cites a thrifted, oversize fur coat as her favorite thing that she owns, and regularly wears earrings that she made, herself, out of bullets, while working at a homeless 26 MODA Spring 2013 man’s jewelry stand. “I was walking in Union Square this past summer when I saw a man on the street making bullet jewelry,” she says. “He told me it was $18 a pair, and I told him I was a student and didn’t have $18 to spend on earrings, so he told me to pop a squat and that he would give them to me for two hours of work.” Horowitz then began to work for the man semi-regularly. “My pay is more of an exchange; I get to keep some of what I make,” she says. “Bullet jewelry is not a statement of violence; it is creating beauty from ugly objects. Something like, wear bullets, don’t shoot ‘em.” This sometime, part-time job is more than making jewelry for her, though. It’s another experience that keeps her grounded, and helps her maintain a sense of balance. For over a decade, Renata danced with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, an experience that she describes as “incredibly rich.” “Theresa Howard, my mentor and instructor, taught me intense discipline, gave me ability to emote and showed me the beauty in recreating classical steps as one’s own,” she says. Horowitz’s life story paints a picture of a free spirit with a down-to-earth sensibility that is generally considered to be sorely lacking from the fashion industry, making her presence there a sort of fascinating anomaly. She spent last summer in Oregon, where her time revolved around storytelling, skinny dipping and farming. “What has always been strange about my life are the dichotomies,” she says. “This past summer I worked on a farm in Deadwood, Oregon for July and worked at Vogue in August. I wore one outfit for the month of July and changed about three times a day in August. A few summers ago, I spent a month on a Blackfoot reservation in Montana and another working at a Whiskey Distillery in New York. I love being able to transition between these two modes of being.” She says that she is able to transition through these beings by keeping certain rituals consistent. “Yoga and photography are two prime examples of this,” she says. “Meditation is more vital to me than sleep.” So what brings a New York dancer with a Condé Nast career to UChicago? “I want to be editor of The New Yorker—that requires a degree. Everyone I spoke to who came here liked a different aspect of the school—so I figured it was a pretty diverse place.” MODA Spring 2013 27 28 MODA Spring 2013 Bare Necessities Basic black and white is timeless photography by charlotte smith styled by nina coomes modeled by trisha gupta & caroline wegner MODA Spring 2013 29 ON CAROLINE dress, Topshop ON TRISHA both tops, G.U. 30 MODA Spring 2013 MODA Spring 2013 31 en pointe The University Ballet of Chicago expresses classic beauty with an edge photography by vivian wan styled by maura conners modeled by amanda block, aixin chen, erik landry, alexandra katarina lee, mesmer rivers & emma mahdieh tehrani 32 MODA Spring 2013 MODA Spring 2013 33 34 MODA Spring 2013 PREVIOUS PAGE ON MESMER skirt, Angelique’s Boutique THIS PAGE ON EMMA blouse and pants, Angelique’s Boutique; skull bracelet, Akira NEXT PAGE ON AMANDA dress, Akira NEXT PAGE ON ALEXANDRA jumpsuit, bracelet and necklace, Akira 36 MODA Spring 2013 MODA Spring 2013 37 38 MODA Spring 2013 THIS PAGE ON AIXIN blouse and skirt, Angelique’s Boutique; earrings, Akira PREVIOUS PAGE (left to right) ON AIXIN dress, Angelique’s Boutique; ON EMMA dress, Angelique’s Boutique; ON ERIK model’s own; ON ALEXANDRA jumpsuit and necklace, Akira MODA Spring 2013 39 a TRIBUTE TERRY RICHARDSON’S STRIPPED DOWN YET SENSATIONALIST STYLE REMINDS US OF THE VALUE OF BEING BOLD FOR SPRING. photography by cathryn jijon styled by lyn han makeup by lucie fama modeled by alexa daugherty & darrian robinson 40 MODA Spring 2013 to terry Credits: (left) (right) MODA Spring 2013 41 42 MODA Spring 2013 PREVIOUS PAGE ON ALEXA sweater, Scotch & Soda; shorts, American Apparel THIS PAGE ON DARRIAN sweater, vintage MODA Spring 2013 43 44 MODA Spring 2013