Lovers Rock

Autumn Winter 2020

Dedicated to each and every one inna di area. A homecoming. Lovers Rock.

A lively community, confident and distinctive in their dress, irreverently sampling tropes of the British wardrobe: Donkey jackets, repurposed 1960s Saville Row tailoring. A moleskin double-breasted blazer adorned with found buttons. Mary-Jane’s by Manolo Blahnik.

The collection references John Goto’s reportage photography of the era documenting young British African-Caribbeans at Lewisham Youth Centre. The portraits tell the story of second generation black
and asian youths finding love and belonging in the underground blues parties of 1970s London. They are defiantly elegant in their swagger and eclectic in expression. Hippie sensibilities. Conservatism of dress rejected. Identity performed with chest-up pride.

Gatherings in rented flats bond this community, transporting them through music and nightlife. Adidas freizeit in hues of crimson, ochre and emerald green. Connections to the Caribbean worn as emblems. Mod jackets in two-tone tweeds and windowpane check playfully mixed with archival crocheted sportswear silhouettes. Military influences are present in a tobacco gabardine cadet jacket and a navy twill pea coat fastened with Jamaican gold brass buttons. Rastafarian influences imbued in hand-knit beanies, crafted in raw Scottish shetland wool in collaboration with Stephen Jones. Swan I and II by British Guyanese abstract painter Frank Bowling are reinterpreted onto silk shirts, layers of warmth line soulful outerwear. The swans serve as a metaphor for the urge towards freedom.

The mood is felt through the rhythmic sweetness of Lovers Rock – tender reggae reverberates from Notting Hill sound systems. Chest-shaking riddims of desire, longing and heartbreak soundtrack a dance between menswear and womenswear introducing a new silhouette.

Interracial couples embrace.

Paying tribute to the soundsystem culture pioneered at blues parties, Jamie XX presents Dancewme - an original composition for Wales Bonner’s Autumn Winter 20 collection. A layered soundtrack honouring a sonic lineage that continues to inform contemporary British dance music from dub to jungle and dubstep.

A sweet song to the strength of community.

 

 

 

REFERENCES

Bhabha, H. K. (1994). The Location of Culture. 1st ed. London: Routledge.
Bob Marley, The Illustrated Biography. (2011). London: Transatlantic Press.
Burke, V. (2012). By The Rivers Of Birmingham. Birmingham: Mac Birmingham.
Frank Bowling. (2019). London: Tate Publishing.
Frank Bowling. Traingone. (2014). Stockholm: Art and Theory.
Gilroy, P. (1987). There Ain’t No Black in the Union Jack’: The Cultural Politics of Race and Nation. 1st ed. London: Unwin Hyman Ltd. Gilroy, P. (2007). Black Britain, A Photographic History. London: Saqi in association with Getty Images.
Goto, J. (1977). Lovers’ Rock. 1st ed. London: Autograph ABP.
Hall, S, with Schwarz, B. (2017). Familiar Stranger: A Life Between Two Islands. Durham: Duke University Press.
Johnson, Linton Kwesi. “Inglan is a Bitch.” Mi Revalueshanary Fren: Selected Poems. (2002) London: Penguin Modern Classics. Jones, C. (2006) The Black House. London: Prestel Publishing.
Liz Johnson Artur. (2016). 1st ed. Berlin: Bierke.
McMillan, M. (2009). The Front Room, Migrant Aesthetics in the Home. London: Black Dog Publishing.
Pressure (1976). Directed by Horace Ové [Film].
Swan I, © Frank Bowling. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2020.
Swan II, © Frank Bowling. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2020.
The Story of Lovers’ Rock (2011). Directed by Menelik Shabazz [Documentary].
Young Soul Rebels (1991). Directed by Isaac Julien [Film].

Wales Bonner, dir. Lovers Rock. London, 2022

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