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| Design - Interviews@3LC | |
| Monday, 21 August 2006 | |
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Couturious...?
Debra’s work caught my eye in London in September 2005 , when I was visiting one of my favorite interior designer shops, Caira Mandaglio in Notting Hill. Sharon and Anna had Debra’s handbag sculptures in their shop front window and her textiles and wallpaper were next door at John Oliver. I learned then that Debra was a recent Central Saint Martins graduate.
In her last year
at CSM, she was recognized for her creativity and talent and was awarded a
sponsorship from Digetex, a leading bespoke digital wallpaper and fabric
brand. This sponsorship, a perfect match
between producer and designer, allowed Debra to pursue her bigger interest in
digital and screen printing technology to bridge the gap between fine art and
fashion. Debra launched the Couturious…? label in May 2006 to give
her interior couture concept a home.
As we walked the
fair, I had the chance to see Debra at work on the business side of Couturious. She brought her design portfolio with her and
targeted the companies she wished to have a relationship with. “To get appointments with all these guys
individually would take forever. All the
creative directors are here now, but they aren’t necessarily expecting someone
to come in to see them with their portfolio.
I’m zigging when they’re zagging, and I think that’s when it works
out.” She was right. Fifteen minutes later, she was sitting at a
grand table in a prominent Italian home label’s stand with her portfolio
open. The Creative Director, initially
hesitant to meet with an unknown ‘walk-in’, was won over by her firm
professionalism and portfolio. He liked
one of her designs so much, he asked her not to show it to any other producers
and it was agreed that after the fair, she would be flown from London to their
headquarters in Italy to discuss a possible collaboration. It also didn’t hurt that she spoke in
Italian. At the departing handshake, she
left her contact details— a swatch of Couturious wallpaper printed with her
contact details. (Right: Wallpaper pattern "bird") That’s Debra. She’s a witty, charming, and talented woman who doesn’t take no for an answer, but she’s not pushy. She’s an optimist and believes in her designs and isn’t afraid to go straight to the top to get them seen. That’s what it takes in her business if you don’t have contacts in the companies with which you’d like to work.
I was sad to say
good-bye to Debra that Saturday evening right about midnight, but it had been a
full day. I was genuinely happy for all
she had accomplished at the Fair, and quite impressed with her ability to
command even five minutes from the Creative Directors of the most important
design houses out there. I love to get
her press releases and news updates because I always know it will be one-up
over the last. She just gets better and
better. (Left: Handbag wallpaper, handbag sculpture, cute fox terrier)
You went back to school after being in the corporate world, which is where people learn important life lessons. What was the most valuable lesson that you took away from Central St. Martin’s? If you believe in something that no one else gets completely yet it peaks curiosity, you should pursue it because you’re onto something! What is the most difficult professional obstacle that you’ve overcome? The fact that I do actually need to sleep! Really though – there were many people out there who wanted to help me at the beginning – I had to learn to distinguish the good from the bad. Now I realize that as soon as you feel that things are going wrong, you should just pull the ripcord. Don’t look back and keep plugging forward.
You
got quite a bit of visibility for your handbag sculptures even while still a
student. Can you
It was my first casting project at St Martin’s. I liked the fact that I was effectively ruining
a £500 handbag –desecrating a luxury item– and covering it with clay and
plaster to make the mold, all in the name of art. It was somehow very satisfying. This is where the psychological twist in my
work started. The handbag came to represent my idea of womanhood. I made various handbag sculptures: one containing a goldfish, which upset quite a few people! Someone actually tried to get me to use a plastic replica. The fish was representative of the caged effect and the looking out at the world. I called this sculpture “Catch” and it was actually the first thing that went up in my house fire, I guess it was set free in a purifying fire. It was very dramatic yet somehow ironically satisfying.
The Couturious logo is the butterfly, which is a recurrent theme, along with other insects, in many of your textile designs. What does the butterfly (and all his friends) signify? How did you develop the logo? The butterfly signifies a metamorphorphic moment. The logo was developed in collaboration with some designers from Paris who were working in my studio, we were an all girl team – it was a very creative and stimulating phase this spring, the birth of the logo was like the birth of the identity of the company. The use of the other insects is not really a conscious one, I just happen to like the small things in life because they are so pretty. I often find myself watching bees as they pollinate or making wishes with ladybirds, saving spiders from the bath… However, even though I love them too, I do admit to killing the odd mosquito! (Left: Jade mini-beast silk window blinds.)
Time Capsule: Which three of your designs would you put in a time capsule today that say the most about you and the times we live in? Let’s see…A transparent resin handbag sculpture containing a dead butterfly called “still here”. It is about the endurance of beauty that is visibly fragile at the centre but has a hard outer shell that protects. It is important that women are strong – I am preparing for motherhood at the moment and I think this forces a woman to protect the creativity inside in a warrior-like way. Then I think I’d include the logo – the name Couturious describes an inquisitiveness for things made for the “me” generation. And…third…I don’t think that I am ready to know yet what the others are – I may have made them but they may be to come…
What
motivates you? |
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