Pulling at the Threads of Fluidity: Aspirations for Non-Gendered and Race-Neutral Fashion in 69's Non-Demographic Design

  • Mariia Spirina Bowling Green State University

Abstract

In the past few years, several fashion brands have attempted the creation of non-demographic clothes to fit everyone regardless of gender, race, and class. Such a utopian design has the possibility to intervene in the cultural politics of identity by creating clothes that allow the wearer to adjust the garments to their body and identity; and yet has the likelihood to perpetuate racism, sexism, and ableism, especially in the marketing of the fashion brands. Although it appears democratic, this design is problematic within a gender-specific aesthetic it promotes as universal and within its representation of racial diversity because it establishes the dominance of one culturally-specific aesthetic over the others. Coming from a position that non-demographic design is a reproduction of hegemonic narratives of the dominant fashion, I analyze the designs of the Los Angeles clothing brand "69" by discussing their designs displayed at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) 69: Déjà Vu exhibition (2018), as well as photographs of 69 clothes from their social media marketing sites.


Keywords: non-demographic design, fashion, 69 brand, identity, genderless, race-neutral

Published
2020-09-16
How to Cite
SPIRINA, Mariia. Pulling at the Threads of Fluidity: Aspirations for Non-Gendered and Race-Neutral Fashion in 69's Non-Demographic Design. Visual Culture & Gender, [S.l.], v. 15, p. 56-67, sep. 2020. ISSN 1936-1912. Available at: <http://www.vcg.emitto.net/index.php/vcg/article/view/142>. Date accessed: 18 may 2024.
Section
Articles