ARCHIVE DIVE: YOHJI YAMAMOTO

ARCHIVE DIVE: YOHJI YAMAMOTO

 

YOHJI YAMAMOTO THROUGH THE YEARS 

 

Since his revolutionary 1981 Paris debut, Yohji Yamamoto's design philosophy has been rooted in tradition yet relentlessly forward-thinking. The Japanese fashion designer built his legacy on celebrating women through oversized silhouettes, wabi-sabi through unfinished hems, and his affection for the color black through the absence of color.  His archive reveals decades of returning to signature motifs—architectural pleating, asymmetric construction, deconstructed details—each iteration deepening rather than repeating.

 

FALL/WINTER 2001

The Asymmetry Flare PO in black resembles this layered look from Yamamoto's Fall/Winter 2001 collection. Yohji chooses the darkest hue to clothe the body in this loose, asymmetrical construction, breathing effortless style into garments from 2001 to present day.

 

SPRING/SUMMER 2008

The Tucked Stitch D Skirt's asymmetric tailoring and layered ruffles appears derivative of the Spring/Summer 2008 collection's motifs. Yohji Yamamoto's deep reverence for the color black and experimental construction is rooted in the Japanese philosophy of Wabi Sabi and Ma: The beauty in imperfection and incompletion.
 

“black is modest and arrogant at the same time. Black is lazy and easy and mysterious. It can swallow light or make things sharp. But, above all, black says don’t bother me.” - Yohji Yamamoto

 


SPRING/SUMMER 2013


This Front Draped Sleeveless Dress shares striking similarities with Yamamoto's Spring/Summer 2013 collection and its pungent shade of red. The designer uses this color throughout collections alongside black as an accent color, occasionally allowing the hue to swallow the garment whole as seen in both interpretations.

 

“Yohji is always singing the same song, just in different arrangements.” - Nathalie Ours

 

fin.

 

 

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