Designing staff uniforms with Stone Island means your work becomes something people wear, move in, and work in. Does it lose something in that translation, or does it gain a different kind of life?
Rather than losing something, it feels like a shift into a different context. When worn, the work is no longer fixed, but changes along with movement and environment. I see this as a kind of extension.
Uniforms usually erase individuality, but your work is very personal and intuitive. Did you try to resist that, or lean into it?
Instead of being completely uniform, I hope subtle differences emerge depending on the person who wears it.
Your work often explores natural phenomena and imagined landscapes, where do these worlds originate from for you?
They originate from memories of landscapes and natural phenomena I have observed, which gradually merge and transform over time.
More broadly, how do you see the relationship between art, function, and everyday use in this kind of collaboration?
I see art, function, and everyday life not as separate, but as continuous. In this kind of collaboration, I find interest in how those boundaries gradually dissolve.
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