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Museums

The Magic of McQueen

More than a fashion exhibition, the record-breaking Savage Beauty is a journey into the mind of Alexander McQueen. Senior research assistant of the V&A’s retrospective, Kate Bethune, talks to Kath Hudson


Antler headdresses, armadillo shoes, bumster trousers. Dresses made out feathers, mussels, razor clams, horse hair and pony skin. These are the creations of the late fashion designer, Alexander McQueen, and they are surprising, charismatic, feminine and intimidating.

Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty closed on 2 August, becoming the V&A’s most visited exhibition, with 493,043 visitors during its 21-week run. To cope with demand, the exhibit was open through the night during its final two weekends.

According to Martin Roth, director of the V&A, Savage Beauty was “one of the most unpredictable, dramatic and spectacular exhibitions we have ever staged”.

“The response has been phenomenal and has exceeded our expectations. It’s been a remarkable experience to stay open around the clock for the first time,” he says.

JOURNEY INTO THE MIND
When creating Savage Beauty, the curatorial team chose to go beyond producing an exhibition of fancy frocks, and take visitors on a journey into his mind, as well as giving the sense of visiting one of his fashion shows.

Having collaborated with McQueen’s former team of catwalk show producers, lighting designer, DJ and hairdresser (who did the masks and head treatments of the mannequins), the result was intoxicating.

“We wanted visitors to feel drawn into his creative mind. We wanted to create a sensory, theatrical, dramatic and immersive experience,” says Kate Bethune, senior research assistant for the V&A’s retrospective. “Each gallery was a contrast to the preceding one and each had a complementary soundtrack to work with it. Switches in tone and tempo drew out the spectacle and drama. It was light on text, so as not to break the sense of immersion.”

SUCCESS IN NEW YORK
Savage Beauty was first staged at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 2011. Attracting almost 700,000 visitors in its four-month run, it was the most visited special exhibition organised by the Costume Institute since it became part of the museum in 1946 and one of the museum’s top 10 most visited exhibitions.

Andrew Bolton was the curator of the Metropolitan exhibition. It featured 100 ensembles and 70 accessories from McQueen’s 19-year career, drawn primarily from the Alexander McQueen Archive in London, with pieces from the Givenchy Archive in Paris and private collections.

Bolton says he wanted the exhibition to show McQueen’s artistry as well as illustrate how his fashion designs reflected his imagination: “McQueen was best known for his astonishing and extravagant runway presentations, which were given dramatic scenarios and narrative structures that suggested avant-garde installation and performance art,” he says. “His fashions were an outlet for his emotions, an expression of the deepest, often darkest, aspects of his imagination.”

Bethune says the V&A inherited a brilliant curation, but wanted to reflect McQueen’s London roots: he was born in Stratford, trained at Central St Martins, cut his teeth on Savile Row and launched his first collection in London. The London gallery, an addition to the beginning of the show, was one of the big changes from New York.

“We wanted to include designs from the early collections to tell the story before he was famous, when he didn’t have any money to invest in shows and materials,” she says. “We emphasised the edginess, rawness and grittiness of the early years.”

EARLY WORK
To showcase work from his early career, the curatorial team had to track down some of McQueen’s early collaborators. “In the early days he couldn’t pay his staff salaries, so he paid them in garments.”

“Those pieces were quite widely dispersed and lots of work went into tracking down his PRs and stylists from that time. We were lucky that his close friend and stylist Katy England let us borrow from her private collection,” Bethune says.

Another development was the expansion of the show highlight, the Cabinet of Curiosities. “We had one-third more space, so we increased the curation by 25 per cent, which equated to 66 more exhibits and almost all of them went into that gallery,” she says. “His limitless imagination really came through in that space. I love the Cabinet because of its intensity and impact. We’d never achieved that in an exhibition before. Not only was this the largest retrospective of McQueen, but the largest and most ambitious fashion exhibition that the V&A’s ever staged.”

FIRST PERSON

Kath Hudson, journalist

Kath Hudson
Kath Hudson

Visceral and captivating, Savage Beauty is an assault on the senses. There’s something appropriately discomforting about the show – and it feels like a show, not an exhibition. I’m assuming Alexander McQueen would have approved: he said he wanted people to be scared of the women who wore his clothes.

The clothes are beautiful, and occasionally frightening: religious motifs become sinister, crocodile skulls are a surprising addition to the shoulders. The black swan dress, which Naomi Campbell famously wore, is aggressive, but with an admirable beauty.

The further through the exhibition you progress, the more you have the sense of looking at works of art as opposed to garments. Light and sound enhance the experience.

The high point – certainly the most overwhelming part of a consistently overwhelming exhibition – is the Cabinet of Curiosities. This double-height gallery has three tiers of exhibits: clothes, shoes, headwear. Some exhibits are revolving, and interspersed with 27 video screens showing footage of McQueen’s shows.

Each wall reflects a different theme: gothic, other cultures, arts and crafts, and nature and the natural world. In the middle is the paint-splattered dress from the Number 13 collection, when a model stood on a rotating disk and the dress was spray-painted by two robots.

Visually, it’s a busy gallery, and the soundtrack, put together by Matt Gosling, creates an eerie sense of unease. There’s a typewriter from A/W 1999/2000 collection the Overlook, which was inspired by Stanley Kubrick’s film The Shining; a child singing from A/W 2001/2002 collection What a Merry-Go-Round and an orchestra playing Adagio for Strings, from a collection exploring war and religion.

I could have stayed there for hours, admiring creations like the outlandish armadillo shoes, but after a while I started to feel how a baby must when it gets overstimulated. The child singing also had a horror movie quality which creeped me out.

More powerful exhibits follow: a recreation of the padded cell fashion show, where the audience could see in, but the models only saw mirrors; and the Pepper’s Ghost of supermodel Kate Moss.

Savage Beauty ends with the final collection, when McQueen’s craftsmanship was at its finest. It’s an extremely powerful show and a privilege to observe his work at such close quarters.

A dress in the Cabinet of Curiosities gallery at the V&A was famously spray-painted by robots as part of Alexander McQueen’s S/S collection in 2013 (left) / PHOTO: Victoria and Albert Museum, London
A dress in the Cabinet of Curiosities gallery at the V&A was famously spray-painted by robots as part of Alexander McQueen’s S/S collection in 2013 (left) PHOTO: Victoria and Albert Museum, London
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Museums: The Magic of McQueen
Behind the scenes of Savage Beauty at the V&A, which explored the life of late fashion designer Alexander McQueen
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