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Category Archives: People

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FASHION’S NIGHT OUT

We celebrated Fashion’s Night Out last night in London, Sydney, Paris and New York. In London our creative director Emma Hill hosted the official Vogue Fashion’s Night Out at our New Bond Street flagship store with Vogue editor-in-chief Alexandra Shulman. We had a house-full for the evening, with music from The Vaccines and Night Works, a pop-up Oyster Bar from J Sheekey restaurant and cocktails by Chase Vodka.

A few hours after London and Paris, New York Fashion’s Night Out kicked off, and Wild Belle were the evening’s DJs at our Spring Street store. Guests at our Bleecker Street store could find dog treats for their four-legged Fashion’s Night Out companions, and Madison Avenue was popular for personalised Nail Rock manicures.

Alexandra Shulman and Emma Hill

Alexandra Shulman and Emma Hill

Daisy Lowe

Daisy Lowe

Harold Tillman, Alexandra Shulman and Sir Philip Green

Harold Tillman, Alexandra Shulman and Sir Philip Green

Laura Bailey

Laura Bailey

Olympia Campbell with a Maisie Clipper in Black

Olympia Campbell with a Maisie Clipper in Black

Erdem Moralioglu and Emma Hill

Erdem Moralioglu and Emma Hill

Florence Brudenell-Bruce

Florence Brudenell-Bruce

Matthew Williamson

Matthew Williamson

Clara Paget and Portia Freeman

Clara Paget and Portia Freeman

Jasmine Guinness

Jasmine Guinness

Irina Lazareanu

Irina Lazareanu

Alexandra Shulman and Clara Paget

Alexandra Shulman and Clara Paget

Christopher Kane

Christopher Kane

Edie Campbell and Pixie Geldof

Edie Campbell and Pixie Geldof

Tallulah Harlech and Roland Mouret

Tallulah Harlech and Roland Mouret

Olympia Campbell and Emma Hill

Olympia Campbell and Emma Hill

Erdem Moralioglu and Nicholas Kirkwood

Erdem Moralioglu and Nicholas Kirkwood

Florence Brudenell-Bruce and Amber Anderson

Florence Brudenell-Bruce and Amber Anderson

Edie Campbell

Edie Campbell

Suki Waterhouse

Suki Waterhouse

Sophie Sumner

Sophie Sumner

Sofia Fisher

Sofia Fisher

Olivia Grant

Olivia Grant

Amber Anderson

Amber Anderson

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MY COOKING DIARY

Our San Francisco correspondent meets Sharon Hwang, a graphic designer and art director who works at Facebook. Sharon also runs a cooking blog, My Cooking Diary, with beautiful and mouth-watering photography, ideas and illustrated notes from her foodie travels.

Sharon Hwang’s My Cooking Diary >

Mulberry in San Francisco >

Tell us a bit about you, where do you live, what do you do?

I’m a graphic designer and art director who has worked in London, Stockholm, and now San Francisco. I’ve recently started a new job at Facebook, after working at Apple for about 5 years. I also run a little cooking blog on the side, called My Cooking Diary.

Sharon Hwang

What inspires you?

Beautiful things and moments! It could be a majestic tree in the forest, a delicious and nurturing meal, or a piece of well crafted design.

Most magical moment?

The first time I walked on a completed frozen sea in Sweden during the winter.

How do you relax?

Cooking and drawing — they both take my mind off everything else.

My Cooking Diary

What gets your creative juices flowing?

Traveling — a shift in time and place always change my perspective, get me out of my comfort zone, and inspires me to create things.

Top five…

Film: Jiro Dreams of Sushi.

Book: Eat Good Food by Bi-Rite Market, an amazing local grocer in San Francisco.

Place: The buzzing market in Marrakech, Morocoo, the natural hot springs in Hakone Japan, the serene archipelagos around Scandinavia.

Food: Best food memories — Gravlax in the Swedish summer, bangers and mash in London, a kaiseki dinner in Japan, childhood dim sum meals, and my grandmother’s cooking.

Mulberry: The new Maisie collection looks incredible. The large Maisie totes look like they would be perfect to hold both my MacBook Pro and traveling sketch book!

Sharon's Travelling Sketchbook

What are your insider tips for visitors to San Francisco that only a local could know?

I guess the answer couldn’t be more relevant when it comes to where a local would eat dinner on a weeknight basis! My boyfriend and I had endless delicious meals at Nopa, the restaurant, and have been frequenting Delfina Pizzeria and the amazing Japanese spot Izakaya Yuzuki.

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IN CONVERSATION:
GEORGIA FENDLEY AND AMANDA BOYLE

After amazing success at the Vimeo Film Awards, where she won Best Fashion Film, director Amanda Boyle joins our Brand Director Georgia Fendley to talk about SKIRT, the Mulberry-commissioned film for InStyle.

Tell us about the project and how the relationship started:

Amanda Boyle: I had heard rumblings that Eilidh Macaskill at InStyle magazine was plotting several films about ‘style’ with fashion brands. I immediately got in touch with her. I think I may have even stalked her a little. It was just that I had been directing back-to-back drama for Channel 4 for a while and I was on the look out for a challenge – a way to work with a hand picked group of collaborators and a chance to tell a story that didn’t pivot on dialogue. Eilidh in turn mentioned me to Mulberry and they, thankfully, were interested in me initially I think because I’d directed Skins.

A still from Skirt

Georgia Fendley: We were keen to find a director we would be really excited to work with, someone whose body of work felt sympathetic to the Mulberry brand. I loved Amanda’s work as soon as we saw it, a very complex and delicate balance of softness, the ‘romance’ of everyday life and a directness that at times is hard and almost jarring, the result draws you in to the narrative and you feel like you are a participant in her films rather than a voyeur.

Georgia Fendley


Amanda Boyle: My films are delicate but they do have a kick. I could certainly see the warmer end of my work fitting with Mulberry yet I’m someone whose experience really is in narrative drama work. So before our blind date, I asked James Cunningham at Academy Films to get involved to produce the film. James is Head of Content at Academy and I knew he’d be able to balance my desire to make a film that explored the stuff of life with whatever it was that Mulberry wanted to get out of the project.

What was exciting is that ultimately Mulberry’s interest in the visceral nature of things was in perfect balance with mine.

Georgia Fendley: James Cunningham from Academy was instrumental in the project; he really listened and guided us through the process, as we were such novices, making sure we understood both the opportunity and restrictions throughout. I think he ‘got us’ on the first meeting so the whole process was incredibly natural, fluid and surprisingly easy.

Amanda Boyle: I also think this project worked because we took a little time to understand each other, shepherded along by James. Once we’d worked out what that tone was of Mulberry – witty, warm and a little quirky – a view of the world they wanted reflected in the film…then I had a sense of how to shape the story about ‘style’ for InStyle. I’m very happy when I know what the constraints of a project are. Both James and Mulberry were brilliant at making sure we were all on the same page.

A still from Skirt

Georgia Fendley: The initial brief was not so much a brief as a series of quite abstract conversations over tea and biscuits! Amanda and I discussed Mulberry, the things that make us tick at quite a profound level, our values and I guess what it is that makes us, us.

I was really clear that we didn’t want the film to be a film about Mulberry or even about fashion and it certainly wasn’t a product or brand showcase. The beauty of the InStyle project was the very fact that this was not an overtly commercial piece, it therefore needed to stand up as a valid creative statement in it’s own right away from any connection to a brand or project.

Amanda Boyle: The other person I should mention at this point is my co-writer Michael Lesslie. Mike is a very talented playwright and screenwriter. He’s also not someone who you’d think of when asked to create a film for a fashion brand – which for me is what made him ideal. He’s always super busy, so he never met Mulberry, yet that process of me explaining to him what they were after, what they stood for, really helped. He kept saying this isn’t a commercial then; it has to be about something.

Michael and I began by brainstorming what ‘style’ was. For us it was the aesthetic choices we make to express who we are, the way we interact with those choices and the way those choices affect the people around us. We imagined how style might be explored within a relationship between two people.

Amanda Boyle


Georgia Fendley: In terms of a ‘theme’ we discussed the ideas preoccupying us at that point – taste and style, relationships, acceptance and dialogues in style – one of the reference points I gave Amanda was Leanne Shapton’s fictional auction catalogue, ‘Important Artifacts and personal property from the collection of Lenore Doolan and Harold Morris, including books on street fashion and jewelry’ by Sarah Crichton Books. The piece is a spoof auction catalogue listing the 325 lots, the remains of the relationship between the fictional Lenore and Harold. The piece is a really sharply observed reflection of modern life and relationships, a beautifully romantic narrative and very, very funny.

Amanda Boyle: There’s a waspish-ness to Leanne Shapton’s book that absolutely wasn’t our film yet her themes and attention to detail definitely did chime with the ideas Mike and I were toying with.

Georgia gave me two rules – 1) to be bold 2) that no one could die in the film. Most of my work looks at stories where rule 2 has been broken melancholically and Mike had been writing a feature where rule 2 was flouted violently – so we were both in exciting new territory.

Together we then wrote the story of two people having to share a flat – how their personal possessions might become a way for them to baffle, fight, flirt and fall in love…all in under four minutes. Mike and I bounced the structure back and forth.

Georgia Fendley: Amanda then shared her draft script, which we loved, from that point on we had no involvement at all – it was all about the story Amanda wanted to tell. It sounds really corny but we just wanted her to be able to create something she would be very proud of, a serious piece of work and something we would want to share with our audiences that would resonate.

On set

Amanda Boyle: Georgia and Mulberry were fantastic. As soon as they were in sync with the story – then they really did give me total freedom. That’s incredibly exhilarating.

At this point the project started to really grow. I started to shape this with production designer Jacqueline Abrahams focusing on what our characters’ objects might be, what those objects would say about them and how the scenes might develop aesthetically. We were interested in looking at one character’s choice of objects, and what these might mean to the other. How far do objects define or come close to any definition of who a person is?

We picked every object you see in the film – vetting it by texture, story and look. We were interested particularly in the kind of objects that you might over look at first but that would suggest a past if focused on as well as the everyday detritus of life that just seems to accumulate and has a beauty of its own. Colours were important. So was a sense of a past. We found things in props houses and in piles of rubbish in the streets near where we lived.

It was fascinating starting with objects first and the process continued as I engaged the costume designer Chloe Richardson [http://www.mystylistsays.com/] who was someone I’d been trying to work with for years. Chloe in turn responded to the objects by starting to define what the characters would wear. We showed her photographs of each of the characters’ props and again talked texture/colour. Each piece of clothing Chloe found for the film has a history – she hunted through vintage shops and charity shops, as well as people’s personal collections.

A still from Skirt

We then got on to the discussion of space with director of photography Ula Pontiko talked about space and the way doorways might frame the characters. Location was important – as it always is when working on a very small budget. Jacqueline and I had a very clear idea of what we were hunting for. We needed corridors that could help present the piece, rooms that had the right feel, yet were also invisible in a way. Once we found the flat – Jacqueline and her team repainted walls – so that the colours brought out the tones in the object and made spaces like the kitchen and bathroom feel both unloved and in keeping with our colour palette.

And then of course I cast the project. Alex and Natalia are completely integral to the film. They were found fairly late in the day as I was very specific about the pair I was looking for. I don’t cast by look, I cast by attitude and energy. It was very exciting when I paired them together in their recall – they both complemented and clashed with each other, they were fascinating to watch. I cast them on the spot.

Amanda Boyle


Georgia Fendley: It was quite strange going to the InStyle screening of Skirt, it sounds terrible but I had completely forgotten other brands were doing this until then and suddenly though ‘oh sh*t, I bet they have tackled it quite differently, we are going to stand out like a sore thumb!’. At the screening, SKIRT did stand out, the only film not directly about a brand, product or creative director, but it stood out in a really good way, it is a beautiful, charming film and everyone really enjoyed it and it seemed a natural fit with Mulberry.

We have been totally blown away by the interest in the film and really pleased to help share the film with a more diverse audience, working with Amanda and such a talented team we shouldn’t have been surprised by the success, we realise how very lucky we are to have had the opportunity to work with her.

Amanda Boyle: Skirt was made with the generosity of Mulberry and InStyle and the incredible work of the film’s phenomenal creative team. Many people donated their skills and time for free so that everything went on screen.

It’s great to see people enjoying the film. I’m sure it’s had such success in part to Mulberry’s bravery at letting us go for it. It was a wonderful experiment – a chance for me and my team to try something different. Perhaps the energy of that is contagious.

Georgia Fendley: This was our first serious foray and it’s given us an appetite! Watch this space!

Amanda Boyle: I want to say a huge thank you to everyone involved in making SKIRT. So many people’s hard work go into making a film. Even a short one.

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LAURA SMALLWOOD

Last week, Laura Smallwood was chosen as the winner of the Mulberry-sponsored Accessories Award at Graduate Fashion Week. She was chosen by our Design Team for her ‘outstanding portfolio and thoughtful ideas.’ Laura takes us through her winning portfolio and inspiration:

“The theme of my collection – ‘The Voyage’ – plays on the inappropriate and sometimes amusing effect of the delicate balance between preparation and exploration. Old family photographs from the early twentieth century illustrate a notion of being inappropriately dressed and prepared in one’s surroundings; formal costume was worn for climbing and other outdoor pursuits. In this case, the result is more comical, as the individuals seem completely juxtaposed to their background.

My collection was influenced by the photographic evidence of these two related areas of research. Shapes and textures from adventures like The Terra Nova Expedition are exaggerated; this inflated manipulation of scale being inspired by my grandfather’s amusing and impractical mountaineering attire.

The initial inspiration was a photograph of my grandfather (who died before I was born) sitting on a rock during a climbing trip in the far north west Scotland, dressed only in a suit and tie, which greatly juxtaposes the surroundings as he was on a climbing expedition in winter!”

Laura Smallwood 'The Voyage'

Laura Smallwood 'The Voyage'

Laura Smallwood 'The Voyage'

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THE ART OF GETTING LOST

We met artist Rick Moody at Frieze New York. His current literary artwork is on GPS and being lost and found; the love/hate relationship with both satellite navigations and traditional maps.

Here, Rick explains how he found art in the idea of getting lost, and how this translated into the surroundings of Randall’s Island, New York.

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FIVE MINUTES WITH SHIHO AMANO

Your name:

Shiho Amano from ELLE Japan.

Where did we meet you?:

At Mulberry’s press day, Tokyo, June 2012.

If you could be anywhere in five minutes, where would it be?:

The top of Tokyo Tower.

What skill would you like to acquire in five minutes?

Magic!

Most fashionable moment?:

Soaking up the atmosphere at Fashion Week.

Top tip?:

Be kind to your family.

Top five:

Film: Little Dancer.
Book: ‘Bonjour Tristesse’
Place: My home.
Mulberry: Zig Zag Bags.
Food: Strawberries and cherries.

Shiho Amano from ELLE Japan

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A FEW OF OUR FAVOURITE THINGS

Everyone is in the Jubilee spirit in time for the weekend, and we’re celebrating lots of lovely touches of Britishness. In honour of our limited edition >Union Jack Collection We asked a few Mulberry friends for their ‘favourite British thing’ – and we received some lovely answers!

We have many favourite things about the UK, but we’ll pick Somerset, the heart of Mulberry, as ours – the home of the original Mulberry tree.

A few of our favourite things...

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JOHN AHEARN

John Ahearn presented a reconstruction of his legendary 1979 exhibition ‘South Bronx Hall Of Fame’ as part of Frieze Projects. We spoke to him about his work, Frieze and his famous castings.

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IN CONVERSATION:
JOHN AHEARN & RIGOBERTO TORRES

In 1979 John Ahearn presented his ‘South Bronx Hall of Fame’ sculptural casts exhibition. A reconstruction of this series of sculptures was presented as part of Frieze Projects, alongside a a casting station where Ahearn and his longtime collaborator Rigoberto (Robert) Torres made a new series of live castings. During the setting-process of one cast, they spoke about how they met and their work.

John: So how, where, when did we meet?

Robert: It was 1979. Through a cousin of mine, he was a taxi driver. He worked by the studio! He dropped by and I think he brought David?

John: Yes, David!

Robert: and he did a cast, it’s the one in front [of the Frieze displays] – with the mouth open and then he brought me over.

John: David came first!

Robert: And then what, we just started working together? I think so. Easy.

[more laughter]

Castings by John Ahearn and Rigoberto Torres

John: There’s more though. I’d like to say, sometimes [people] like to say that downtown artists brought culture to the Bronx – that’s such a false statement, such a misunderstanding of everything going on. You brought quite a bit to the table considering you were still in high school. – For example, your uncle Raoul had a major statuary factory near by in the Bronx where they mass produced popular sculptures of all conceivable images you could imagine, imaginary voodoo gods, Elvis Presley, everything, right? For general consumption!

This happened to be, at the time when, in downtown, in many intellectual circles the thought was that bad popular art was the cool thing to go after, such as something you would buy in Coney Island. Artists were trying to do this kind of thing. Soon we were showing Uncle Raoul’s sculptures at Fashion Moda, at the gallery, and then you took materials that I was using out on the streets to cast the faces just on the sidewalk, in front of the building. You were casting the neighbours while I was in Fashion Moda!

Robert: I just took it from indoors to outdoors…all the way back in ’79. I took the idea out into the open. There’s nothing to hide in this process. Let everyone see what’s happening. There’s no secret to our work, it’s out there, It uses people. Everyone wants to do it once they see it, that’s why at Frieze we are giving people the opportunity for the live castings, to see something happen.

John and Robert casting at Frieze

John: People like to say we ‘work together’ or ‘collaborate’. We help each other as much as possible during the casting process. Is there such a thing as one person’s art and then another person’s art? Yes there is! If you look in this book right here there are specific artworks that are called John Ahearn, some are called Rigoberto Torres, now what is the difference? When we help each other? First of all, whose original impulse was it to make this particular idea or image? Who had the idea? Who said it first?

Robert: Well we sometimes argue over that…

John: Ha! I’m the senior member so it’s my idea, haha!

Here’s the thing, don’t you think. Once we help each other do the life casting usually whoever touches the piece just as the plaster is going into the mould, by then its already too late, it’s already one of ours! You might work next to me but you’re not my assistant, you don’t get to carve things or saw the plaster on my pieces. If it’s mine it’s mine. It’s the same with you though, you’re much worse!

[laughter from Robert]

You are so territorial that when you gets an idea you don’t tell me anything about it until it’s all finished!

Robert: It’s just not true… we’ll have to tell them about your temper tantrums soon.

John: I was thinking Robert, back to the first question, when we met we had a very odd but special relationship: I didn’t know what your phone number was, where you lived, who you was with, anything, you just showed up everyday and then left!

Robert: I was working on a piece, with my family, as well.

A cast in progress

John: I didn’t know, and then I saw it presented and it just knocked me… it’s conceptually and aesthetically and spiritually on a very high level. It’s like a pyramid or something.

Robert: Don’t forget I worked for my uncle, in the factory, which is where I learnt mould-making for outdoor pieces. That was my link to you outside of our work. The skills I have from that developed the work that you and I did. All the outdoor pieces in the Bronx.

Do you think we argue most of the time?

John: Don’t say that Robert!

Robert: We work well together, even with any arguments or misunderstandings.

John: Well we don’t work side by side always. That’s the thing. I live in New York and you live in Florida. When you moved we were already in the middle of a piece, which we continued without stopping. We would organise a meeting point such as Sao Paulo airport at a specific moment in time and we would start! Or we would meet in Taipei, and meet at the airport again and begin a project. We were doing projects that didn’t need to be ‘based’ in New York and so it didn’t matter that much that we weren’t always near. Does it make a difference you not being here? Yes, of course, it’s a big loss, but that’s life.

Robert: it’s not like we miss each other!

John: Oh I’m as happy as a clam!

Robert: It’s hard in a way. I’ve worked in many museums and have been doing so in Florida, but it’s not the same as being in New York. But I don’t love New York. I like Florida.

John: Florida is a nice place for asthmatics! I love to be on my feet, in New York you can just walk everywhere and I feel free.

John with a cast in progress

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DINNER ON THE UPPER EAST SIDE

Creative Director Emma Hill and Frieze founders Amanda Sharp and Matthew Slotover hosted an intimate dinner in honour of the artists of Frieze Projects at the debut Frieze New York.

The Mulberry-sponsored Frieze Projects is a not-for-profit initiative featuring commissioned artworks around the outdoor space of Randall’s Island, which are accessible to all visitors to the area.

The artists involved with Frieze Projects attended the dinner, held at The Crown restaurant on New York’s Upper East Side, and joined guests including Lana Del Rey (who sang an exclusive set for our guests), Alexa Chung, Lauren Remington-Platt and the Courtin-Clarins sisters Claire, Jenna, Virginie and Prisca as well as Frieze Projects curator Cecilia Alemani.

Lana Del Rey and Emma Hill

Lana Del Rey and Emma Hill

Alexa Chung and Emma Hill

Alexa Chung and Emma Hill

Frieze Projects curator Cecilia Alemani

Frieze Projects curator Cecilia Alemani

Derek Blasberg and Alexa Chung

Derek Blasberg and Alexa Chung

Jenna, Virginie, Prisca and Claire Courtin-Clarins

Jenna, Virginie, Prisca and Claire Courtin-Clarins

Fashion Editor Vanessa Friedman

Fashion Editor Vanessa Friedman

Stefano Tonchi and Emma Hill

Stefano Tonchi and Emma Hill

Lauren Remington Platt

Lauren Remington Platt

Albert Hammond Junior and Emma Hill

Albert Hammond Junior and Emma Hill

President of Bergdorf Goodman Josh Schulman and Jim Conley

President of Bergdorf Goodman Josh Schulman and Jim Conley

Alexa Chung and Mark Holgate

Alexa Chung and Mark Holgate

Lana Del Rey sings

Lana Del Rey sings

Matthew Slotover and Amanda Sharp

Matthew Slotover and Amanda Sharp

Emma Hill

Emma Hill

Alexa Chung

Alexa Chung

Shala Monroque

Shala Monroque

The dinner was held in honour of Frieze Project artists

The dinner was held in honour of Frieze Project artists

Ready for dinner

Ready for dinner

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