{"id":23904,"date":"2023-05-23T17:41:18","date_gmt":"2023-05-23T17:41:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/uaaglobal.com\/ashish-fall-in-love-and-be-more-tender-exhibition-a-glittering-testament-to-a-fashion-genius\/"},"modified":"2023-05-23T17:41:18","modified_gmt":"2023-05-23T17:41:18","slug":"ashish-fall-in-love-and-be-more-tender-exhibition-a-glittering-testament-to-a-fashion-genius","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/uaaglobal.com\/ashish-fall-in-love-and-be-more-tender-exhibition-a-glittering-testament-to-a-fashion-genius\/","title":{"rendered":"Ashish: Fall in Love and Be More Tender exhibition \u2013 a glittering testament to a fashion\u00a0genius"},"content":{"rendered":"
Naomi Braithwaite<\/a>, Nottingham Trent University<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n The first retrospective exhibition of the fashion designer Ashish Gupta<\/a> has opened at London\u2019s William Morris Gallery<\/a>.<\/p>\n As an expert in fashion marketing (and a proud owner of a number of Ashish\u2019s renowned shimmering sequined skirts<\/a>) I was greatly excited by the prospect of the show.<\/p>\n When the day of my visit came, not only was I was able to immerse myself in Ashish\u2019s wonderful creations, but I had a chance encounter with the designer himself. He told me that the skirt I had chosen to wear that day (a sparkling green fish print fabric, covered in iridescent sequins) was from one of his earliest collections.<\/p>\n It was in 2021, 20 years after Gupta founded his label eponymous label, Ashish, that the Morris Gallery\u2019s curators Roisin Ingleby and Joe Scotland conceived the exhibition. Ingleby told me of the hours of joy they had spent in Ashish\u2019s London design archive, selecting the 60 designs that would eventually be showcased through the exhibition.<\/p>\n As a designer, Gupta is celebrated for colourful, glamourous, extravagant designs realised through detailed craftsmanship. Up to 30 garments are handmade each season. They are made to order<\/a>, with a limited run on designs, ensuring exclusivity and longevity.<\/p>\n Ashish Gupta was born in Delhi to GP parents. His first exposure to fashion was through a copy of Vogue magazine that his mother had \u201csmuggled into the house<\/a>\u201d.<\/p>\n At his strict Catholic school, Gupta was bullied<\/a> and fashion and cinema became his escapism.<\/p>\n Having initially studied fine art in India, he moved to London to study fashion design at Central Saint Martins, graduating in 2000. He remembers the then course director, Louise Wilson<\/a>, giving him the best possible advice: to dream<\/a>.<\/p>\n The colour, sparkle and sequins which have come to define his work ever since are the realisation of that dream.<\/p>\n When Gupta\u2019s eponymous label was discovered by the famous Browns Focus boutique<\/a> on London\u2019s South Molton Street, he was launched from making clothes for friends into the international fashion industry<\/a>.<\/p>\n Gupta is now considered a pioneer in the way his designs challenge heterosexual, masculine stereotypes and explore the role of clothing in making political and social statements<\/a>.<\/p>\n This exhibition focuses on the stories told by his creations, demonstrating fashion\u2019s power as a form of cultural commentary.<\/p>\nFrom a Delhi boy to the king of sequins<\/h2>\n