
Of air and dreams. Yiqing Yin.
Lienart / Fashion Lace CityN° d'inventaire | 33007 |
Format | 21 x 26 |
Détails | 160 p., 120 color ill., publisher's hardcover |
Publication | Paris, 2025 |
Etat | Nine |
ISBN | 9782359064704 |
Yiqing Yin, the first designer of Chinese origin to receive the French appellation of haute couture, is a multidisciplinary artist. At the crossroads of the arts, her sculptural and evanescent works weave a dialogue between the fragility of humankind and the creative force of nature.
A great couturier, artistic director, costume designer, and muse, Yiqing Yin embodies multiple roles. This book highlights the hybridization of her artistic disciplines, between dream and exploration of the senses, and invites us to penetrate the heart of the creative process, to grasp the idea even before the dress. Chance, the unexpected, and the indeterminate are the keys to the sensory journey where the work is revealed... The artist draws her inspiration from minerals, plants, and animals, thus developing a poetics of the living. Each creation reveals itself as a dreamlike landscape, where dreams and the awakening of the senses intertwine in an aesthetic of metamorphosis.
Yiqing Yin, the first designer of Chinese origin to receive the French appellation of haute couture, is a multidisciplinary artist. At the crossroads of the arts, her sculptural and evanescent works weave a dialogue between the fragility of humankind and the creative force of nature.
A great couturier, artistic director, costume designer, and muse, Yiqing Yin embodies multiple roles. This book highlights the hybridization of her artistic disciplines, between dream and exploration of the senses, and invites us to penetrate the heart of the creative process, to grasp the idea even before the dress. Chance, the unexpected, and the indeterminate are the keys to the sensory journey where the work is revealed... The artist draws her inspiration from minerals, plants, and animals, thus developing a poetics of the living. Each creation reveals itself as a dreamlike landscape, where dreams and the awakening of the senses intertwine in an aesthetic of metamorphosis.