You cant keep a creative mind down as designer Gareth Pugh's creations are set to strut the stage for a Royal Ballet production.
Today ELLE meets Pugh at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden at which he is designing the costumes for Carbon Life, the latest work by the ‘anti-ballet’ boundary-pushing dance choreographer Wayne McGregor.
Superstar producer Mark Ronson is composing the score and musicians including Boy George and Alison Mosshart are also involved. “You wouldn’t put my visual world in the same oral world as Mark Ronson,” says Pugh, “but Wayne likes that tension between two things, it’s kind of like two magnets.”
It will come as no surprise that the costumes Pugh has designed for the most petite and delicate of ballerinas come in foreboding black, anchored by distorted, jutting protrusions. But aside from the costumes it’s Pugh’s creative metamorphosis that is most thrilling to watch unfurl. “It’s kind of throwing myself in at the deep end.” He says. “The stage is huge and it’s a great honour to be able to do it, but it’s also quite a daunting prospect.”
It’s difficult to imagine Pugh being daunted by anything; this is the designer who takes macabre delight in warping our perceptions of shape, fashion and gender. Yet in this environment - and working for someone else - he has had to surrender (a bit) of that control. “I guess I have to let my Virgo tendencies wane a little bit ... I want everything to be perfect. I get to breathe down a lot of people’s necks when it’s my own thing, whereas with this, they really know what they’re doing here.”
Pugh is traversing a foreign design landscape with a ballerina’s health and safety paramount, Pugh has had to think about practicality – possibly for the first time ever – during the creative process. “With this [the clothes] really needed to serve a purpose. [With a Gareth Pugh collection] I need my girls to walk in a straight line up-and-down a catwalk; it’s not really very demanding. When I was designing the pointe shoe they were very worried about health and safety. My version of the pointe shoe is not really a little satin slipper with ribbons, it’s a bit more complicated than that.”
Complicated? It’s positively perverse with the ballerina’s feet encased in tough-looking, articulated, black angular ballet socks. These are no tutu clad jewellery box dancers; these are Gareth Pugh ballerinas as you’d expect. “I don’t want it to look like people on the stage dancing around in clothes that we have on the catwalk,” he says. “I don’t want them to look like dancing models. I want them to look like dancers, seen through the world in which my clothes exist in.”
Carbon Life opens at The Royal Opera House on April 5, 2012 -elleuk.com
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