Saturday 10 March 2012

Mannequins of the world


Mannequins are a mirror of how we would like to be, a glamorous alternative of who we are. 
In 1964 Adel Rootstein developed the first celebrity mannequin when she sculptured a 
14 year old Twiggy. Since then the "ideal glamour woman" has been used as a template, 
from Lynda Carter to Victoria Beckham, depending on current social preferences.
They also mirror our social times. After World War II mannequins were made with happy smiles
as they welcomed the troops home. In the months following 9/11 the mannequins in New York 
were sombre and draped in red white and blue. 
Six months later mannequins had lost their heads or their faces and the windows of New York 
were without glamour or personality. 
It took more than a year before frivolity returned.
 The mannequins of Hollywood Boulevard mirror a slightly tawdry, totally unreal sexuality.
Mannequins mirror the cityscape back at us on the windows they hide behind. City reflections 
take the mannequins out of the window and place them firmly in our world where they are very 
much alive. Like us.
New York
 The city they inhabit is familiar but is seen eerily in reverse.
Paris
 The city reflections put the mannequin in a time and space, from the skyscrapers of New York, 
to the grand emporiums of Regent Street London and to the country shop fronts of rural Australia.
London
Camperdown, Victoria
I began shooting mannequins in New York in 1977 and a fascination turned into an obsession 
and then a profession.

I’ve travelled the world trying to find mannequins that reflected the local community but I found 
the opposite. Chanel windows look the same in Tokyo, in Melbourne, in New York and all
places in between.
Tokyo
Madrid
 An aside about Chanel: for years they used mannequins based on Erin O’Connor and Ute 
Lemper, a couple of years ago they changed to a very ugly cheaper mannequin, much to the 
disgust of stylists.
Paris
I couldn’t find an Asian mannequin in Shanghai or Hong Kong.
Hong Kong
Shanghai
And now, world chains are rolling out their look throughout the world. Zara, internationally are 
using an abstract white mannequin that has graphic black elements added to it for a change.
Melbourne
 But I noticed last year, so it may have changed by now, in London Zara was still using realistic 
Rootstein mannequins.


I’d like to thank all stylists and visual merchandisers for dressing your city and making travel for 
me always exciting.
Paris
London

For a collection of world windows check this out

For more models of the world
http://www.flickr.com/photos/dianeworland/collections/72157618909900091/



3 comments:

  1. Great blog, Diane. I really enjoyed to read it. Thanks.
    Alvaro

    ReplyDelete
  2. Love this blog. Great and accurate information. Never understood the Orient for not using mannequins reflecting their population

    ReplyDelete