The Zandra Rhodes Digital Study Collection Project at the University for the Creative Arts
Author(s) -
Amy Robinson
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
electronic workshops in computing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISSN - 1477-9358
DOI - 10.14236/ewic/eva2014.44
Subject(s) - clothing , the arts , work (physics) , visual arts , computer science , multimedia , range (aeronautics) , data collection , world wide web , engineering , sociology , art , history , archaeology , mechanical engineering , social science , aerospace engineering
This demonstration will enable participants to explore the extraordinary work of the British fashion and textile designer Zandra Rhodes. The Zandra Rhodes Digital Study Collection provides online access to a range of unseen dresses and garments from the designer's private archive. Participants will be given an opportunity to explore the archive as well as a range of supplementary resources created to support and enrich learning, teaching, and research. The Zandra Rhodes Digital Study Collection project (November 2011 - February 2013) set out to digitally photograph, research, catalogue, and provide online access to 500 garments selected from the thousands held in the designer's London studio and apartment. This JISC-funded initiative was led by the University for the Creative Arts (UCA), a specialist art and design University with campuses across Kent and Surrey. Zandra Rhodes studied at one of UCA's founder colleges, the Medway College of Design, before pursuing a career in fashion spanning five decades, in which she has designed for clients such as Elizabeth Taylor, Freddie Mercury, and Diana, Princess of Wales. She became the University's first Chancellor in 2010. A series of video tutorials were developed with the designer and her studio team demonstrating her production processes, as well video interviews revealing the inspiration behind her most iconic pieces and collections. 'Turning the Pages' technology was also used to provide access for the first time to her 'Style Bible' drawings comprehensively recording her designs. This session will provide a range of insights into this unique collaboration with a living artist's archive, including: the opportunities for enriching the online archive with the personal knowledge, memories, and methods of its creator; the chance for students to see 'behind-the-scenes' in a working fashion studio on project internships; the dialogue around photographic objectivity, creativity and styling; the complexity of representing the three dimensionality of fashion and textiles; the engagement with academics and students and their user testing of the online resources; and an overview of legal considerations such as copyright and data protection.
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