cherevichkiotvichki ss 2018


 
'A Collection of Men's & Women's clothing, shoes and accessories titled "TRANSFORMATION INTO ENSUING CONFORMATION" with the third preview of shoes from Micheal Moir's Archive.''A shoe by Victoria', in the old Slavic language translates to the na…

'A Collection of Men's & Women's clothing, shoes and accessories titled "TRANSFORMATION INTO ENSUING CONFORMATION" with the third preview of shoes from Micheal Moir's Archive.'

'A shoe by Victoria', in the old Slavic language translates to the name of the clothing atelier 'cherevichki ot vichki.' The shoes are hand-made, natural dyed leather with wooden soles, using traditional Baltic techniques. Accessories include leather bags of the same quality and a collection of hand-dyed garments reminiscent of (to my eye) what was worn as undergarments in the late 1800's. It took me a week to get comfortable saying it, but now it's my favorite word. Cherevichkiotvichki. Try it.

The Cherevichki showroom is carefully crafted in the same manner as the collection. Linen, cotton and other natural fibers, all sourced from Lithuania, hang from wooden frames in staggered sheets, each one fastidiously decorated with the raw items that begat the collection. Cotton blooms are sewn into blossoms, rubber drips down linen, and twine, wire and wood intersect to create a textile wonderland. The scene takes back to Picasso's deconstructed guitars. In retrospect, if I had more presence in the moment, I would have removed my shoes and navigated the room like a temple, pausing at each item to pay homage to the craftsmanship. 

Here's a little context so you can also appreciate this (if you don't already). Cherevichkiotvichki is the offspring of Lithuanian-born Victoria Andrejeva. To my calculations, it's the thirteenth Cherevichki collection and yet another testament to her mastery of process and freedom of form. The label (mostly leather, mostly shoes in the beginning) met early acclaim with cosigns from Rei Kawakubo (Trading Museum Comme des GarΓ§on) and successive collaborations with Yohji YamamotoToogood and Dover Street Market, as well as Mona Moore in LA.

You can only truly understand the act of creation through the series of all variations.
— pablo picasso
107SS18 FLARED COAT, LIGHT SILK, BEIGE

107SS18 FLARED COAT, LIGHT SILK, BEIGE

107SS18 FLARED COAT, LIGHT SILK, BEIGE

This collection comes in a set, like its predecessors. Part one is titled 'Transformation into Ensuing Conformation.' The white Parisian room pulls my attention every which way as I gingerly step (cursing my tall black boots) through the delicate structures around the shoes. I took inventory of the things I knew to expect, the quality, the innovation, the collaboration. I would offer comparisons of Cherevichki to other brands but it feels like a different world altogether, one from a past time connected to the future.

It's all art, in which she seamlessly zips her USSR inspired almost-Edwardian forms with details and raw modern edges that call out to Yamamoto. Almost invisible zippers appear on the seams of a light but durable jacket. Leather handbags with graffiti'd canvases reveal scrawled Russian profanity and coffee cup stains. Grey almost gauze-like Lithuanian textiles fill out the shapes of soviet uniform pattern jackets with removable inserts, panels, and collars (shown below half-zipped). I mentally wish-list everything, but specifically a smooth cream underhat that straps under the chin like an updated bonnet.

106SS18 ADJUSTABLE UNLINED COAT WITH ZIP, WAXED COAT, CREAM125SS18 ASYMMETRIC UNDERHEAT, LIGHT SILK, BEIGE

106SS18 ADJUSTABLE UNLINED COAT WITH ZIP, WAXED COAT, CREAM

125SS18 ASYMMETRIC UNDERHEAT, LIGHT SILK, BEIGE

cherevichkiotvichki ss 18 / emaritraffie.com
104SS18 COAT WITH REMOVABLE LINING AND COLLAR, MEDIUM LINEN MESH, GREY99SS18 TWO PIECE DRESS, LIGHT LINEN MESH, GREY

104SS18 COAT WITH REMOVABLE LINING AND COLLAR, MEDIUM LINEN MESH, GREY

99SS18 TWO PIECE DRESS, LIGHT LINEN MESH, GREY

Cherevichki, Op. 14 - Comic-fantasy opera in four acts by Jakov Polonskij (1885) Overture to the opera "Cherevichki" (The Slippers) by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893), a revision of his earlier opera "Vakula the Smith". Both works are based on the story "Christmas Eve" by Nikolai Gogol, which is found in his collection "Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka".
[picasso, 'guitare' paris, jan-feb 1914]

[picasso, 'guitare' paris, jan-feb 1914]

On ne peut vraiment suivre l’acte crΓ©ateur qu’à travers la sΓ¨rie de touts les variations.
— pablo picasso