Exhibition

Bonington Vitrines #27: Nottingham Subcultural Fashion in the 1980s

22 Mar 2025 – 10 May 2025

Regular hours

Monday
10:00 – 17:00
Tuesday
10:00 – 17:00
Wednesday
10:00 – 17:00
Thursday
10:00 – 17:00
Friday
10:00 – 17:00
Saturday
11:00 – 15:00
Sunday
Closed

Free admission

Save Event: Bonington Vitrines #27: Nottingham Subcultural Fashion in the 1980s

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Bonington Gallery

Nottingham, United Kingdom

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Bonington Gallery is delighted to dedicate the final Vitrines instalment of its 2024/25 season to archive material, information, and clothing that documents the dynamism of Nottingham's independent fashion scene in the 1980s.

About

In the years following Beeston-born Sir Paul Smith’s ascendency from a 3x3m store on Byard Lane in 1974 – to bases in London, Paris, and Tokyo – many local fashion brands were established, including several by graduates from ‘Trent Poly’, who bucked the moving-to-London trend by committing themselves to the city and starting a new generation of independent labels. Homegrown brands such as G Force, Olto, Vaughan & Franks, Katsu, and Cocky’s Shed were just a few…

These brands combined talent, style discernment, DIY attitudes, and cheap rents to start labels, open shops, and form global influence and connection. At one point the city even gained its own style pages in the form of Déspatch, Relay and Débris magazines, providing content as broad ranging as fashion editorial featuring local and international designers, montages of nights at The Garage, and signposting visitors to the shops and studios that were physically and ideologically a long way from the High Street.

The fashion scene that developed placed equal importance on both studio and social time, building a network of close-knit creatives who collaborated and supported one another. This community incapsulated many of the same qualities that gave rise to other significant, and perhaps more well-known cultural communities such as the city’s music, cinema and contemporary art scenes.

The aim of this presentation is to celebrate and help establish a legacy for this important period within the city’s [sub]cultural history. An open call for materials will run in the lead-up and during the exhibition, allowing anyone to submit related materials that will join the exhibition and evolving noticeboard.

Accompanying the exhibition will be a suite of specially commissioned essays by Ian Trowell, who has also provided curatorial consultancy and research to this project, having interviewed several of the key protagonists of that era. Ian writes on subjects including UK subcultures, music, fashion, popular culture, art, and media. His book Throbbing Gristle: An Endless Discontent was published by Intellect Books in 2023.

This exhibition has been co-curated with Dr Katherine Townsend, a researcher, educator, practitioner, and Professor in Fashion and Textile Practice in the Fashion, Textiles and Knitwear department in the School of Art and Design at Nottingham Trent University.

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