“We get caught up in being cute and having fun, that we forget that there’s real work that’s necessary for our discipline to be taken seriously as a art form” been watching you for roughly a year. Every video i learn something new. Well said Bliss, thanks
Your curiosity and lack of negativity are exactly why I watch. "Fashion roast" type videos might be fun in the moment, but an hour afterwards are completely forgettable. Your work keeps me thinking long after the video has ended and adds to my knowledge base.
Holy crap dude. 250k subs. I told you once that you’re gonna do great, and you are well on track to be one of the most well known fashion personalities on this platform. Keep going 💪🏽
I think I said this before, and I'll say it again: Thank you for all of this. I clicked on one of your videos on impulse, and, after being really impressed with how you describe it all, I subscribed and continued to watch all of your new videos. You've honestly taken me from "I don't really get fashion" to "Hey, this is actually really interesting!"
I'm japanese student lives in Paris who writes fashion critics for myself for now and for me true critics of visual art is not about evaluating something, but expressing its beauty as it is, or even more beautifully, in words, but without saying it's beautiful. What you do is always amazing critics, can't wait to see you two again in this freezing Paris ;)
You are very professional and fair in this review and in your disclaimers, but I expected something different from this video: maybe more humour, more images of fashions shows and less explanation, maybe actually negative reviews and why the collection was bad.
Criticising is not putting down. Criticising is giving reasons and offering comprehension. For any professional critic, it is much harder and much more rewarding to write an article full of genuine praise and provide all the reasons for such praise then to destroy an obvious piece of ***. And in your work you are doing exactly that, you've taken on a harder but a much more meaningful road.
I think social media has warped the idea of what criticism is. The algorithm pushes people up that do vapid negative shitting on things more. Maybe the amount of comments on those videos defending/agreeing letting the algo think “oh this is popular! Push it!” Not taking into account the actual context of the things being presented or discussed. This may also lead people who associate criticism with negativity and avoid criticism or critical thinking altogether. You can be both critical and positive.
It’s interesting that you mention access because I watched a masssive amount of your content over the last few years and I felt the increase in quality once you where able to get into shows really noticeable. Your commentary ws really good before, but being able to go to shows really leveled it up. Especially when you get to talk to and interview bc designers is when the content is at its best imo
Ok, idk if this is fake deep or not, but i was just thinking about how in your margiela videos you always talk about how one of his core design things was deconstructing his clothes to show the process of its making, and i can't help but think that your editing style is exactly that same thing! The bloopers throughout, daniella's notes, it doesnt read as unfinished or sloppy editing because you're very intentionally cutting and adding notes in post. It heightens the final video and makes it more of an engaging and cohesive final project, EXACTLY like how deconstruction works in fashion. Thanks for another good video.
Thank you so much for this video. It really resonates with how i feel about "art school" as an institution... hard to describe here exactly, but when I was doing my Masters in Fine Art (which a I actually left after disagreeing with the establishments approach to experiencing education and teaching in general) I felt this ranking and judgement that I'm sure most of all students feel. This ranking put in place to try to measure the objectively of a work of art that is often subjective, is quite frustrating. Here in France our bachelors degree in fine art is given on a strange system of merit that I believe is highly flawed, after a 3 years of study. Yet these three years iare not necessarily taken into account by the judges... Two judges (who have never seen your work and are often times picked at random by the establishment's higher higher ups) are assigned to the class and each student presents there work for 20 to 30 minutes. Years of work boiled down to this one instant, this presentation that if not explained by the creator in a way where the judge feels it is accessible and that they can connect with, your whole 3 years of work could be thrown down the drain. It is quite a strange situation to be in, and at the end you are left with a piece of glorified paper saying you've accomplished something or not. I left my masters program because I realized that I much rather learn a skill that could help my creative process/progress. More of wanting to do an "apprentissage", I fell in love with ceramics and my passion for this atelier that was not my assigned "major" seemed to be a problem. everything needed to be explained with very little "recule" (very little stepping back). It can take years to understand why an artist chose to do what they did, and having to explain it as it was happening kind of took something out of it. Its a long story but thats what I was thinking when I was watching this, as I am hand sewing a silk slip style skirt... because hand sewing right now has me reconciling my relationship to my body.
Your humour is very captivating, the deeply disturbing flashes of your gaping shirt for example are strangely hysterical & unsettling at the same time. It’s also quite refreshing to hear someone discuss fashion who doesn’t intonate like a contestant from drag race, ie gurrrl, the tea, fashown, gagging, serving blah blah. I’m enjoying this!
This is whyI love running in to you. 40 years in Fashion and most journalists will be nasty to show that they know what is good and you don’t. It’s too easy
Great video Bliss, I’m in my final semester of fashion school, what you said the last 7 minutes of the video is the exact feelings I’ve had the past 4 years I’ve been in school. I’m new to the fashion scene admittedly, I have an economics background and transitioned to fashion, because of that I like to take a more research approach to the art . I struggle to find any articles that truly go deep into the meaning of the art form, rather I just find opinions of people that think they said something meaningful. You’re right it’s really hard, but it’s the right thing. It would suck to see the art form be ruined because of things like this.
Honestly I’ve never had too much of an interest in fashion until this most recent youtube deep dive. But boy is this relatable, it feels so hard to actually commit to any rigorous analysis when most discussions online boil down to the most surface level ratings of “good or bad”. It just feels like that kind of thinking totally misses the point of art (as you touched on eloquently). Great stuff man, thoroughly enjoying this new education I’m receiving
I will be honest I did click on this (I am subscribed) because of the title....Whaaaaaat Mr. Foster never has a bad thing to say about fashion shows, what's this all about....and then you explained and I wasn't disappointed. This has always been a safe place to hear you gleefully talk about fashion shows, designers, fashion as art and otherwise and I may not always see it or agree, but it is always interesting point of view. Continued success!
Thank you for truly love what you do Bliss Foster and sharing it with the World through your wonderful channel! Thought of you as I watched the Emporio Armani Fall 20224 show as to me it seems that Giorgio Armani and His Team took inspiration from Rick Owens while keeping the Emporio Armani aesthetic.
Love this video. I'm so sick of the negative video essays about everything. Its in fashion in video games its everywhere its like everyone needs to be critical for no reason. And i think thats ruining art. I'm so happy you to hear you say all this everyone needs to hear this.
On your Hamlet journal example. I found a youtuber called Ellie Dashwood this week and all of the videos of her I have seen are bout Jane Austen and how masterfully she portrayed uppercrust Regency English people... and I have found great enjoyment on her content because it helps me see all the stuff I didn't understand when I first read some of her more famous books at like 16 years old. And Bernadette Banner is for me the GOAT of fashion historical reconstruction UA-cam and part of it is recontextualising the amount of laubour and tools and expectations of the time, in one of her videos she said that in Victorian hand sewing manuals it was recommended (ideally) that every stitch had like two threads width and I was horrified at the thought of sewing anything in such a manner. I can sew and embroider both with the machine and by hand (even if not very skillfully) there is no power in heaven or hell that can convince me to stitch even a single cuff with a a two thread width stitch... Fashion History/Analysis and history in general doesn't need to start being written centuries or decades after and I personally consider you and Daniella are making a very strong base for it that is and will be greatly appreciated. Fashion informataiment is good funny haha content but your videos are actually educational.
Honestly, for really new designers who are self funded, it’s high key shitty to put them down. Like, if someone wants to express themselves in one of the most expensive art mediums of all time. The least we can do is be polite
i love the behind the scenes in this video. Bliss could you maybe drop some merch (as cringey as merch sounds) cause i really want to support this channel but i really cant do subscriptions rn
This might be my favourite ever video of yours. As an aspiring fashion journalist, this has completely chsnged the way I view fashion criticism. This is definitely one of those videos that's gonna have me thinking for the next few days. Thank you for your content, Bliss!
Negativity is incredible important and necessary. It needs to be there to balance out the positivity in order to make us balanced and not deluded. Focusing only on positivity is for people with fragile and big egos who can't handle criticism. Designers need to be accept criticism and must never think they are beyond it. We can like and dislike, this is human nature and helps us navigate the world we live in. We shouldn't change the equilibrium of life. Negativity is fundamental and acceptable.
Recently the topic of criticism in art has been occupying me, however from another perspective. *Who the creators make their art for, critics or people?* As someone who goes to theater and cinema a lot, I can make my own opinion and say it was 8/10, I liked it or I didn’t. And this is how movies make their box office, despite bad critics reviews. And the same goes for fashion, I guess, bc at the end of the day it’s people who are going to bring money to the designer/maison/lvmh… There’s huge difference how professionals and general public perceive the same piece of art - a theater performance, a fashion show etc. And I’m grateful to critics for putting all the threads together and explaining to me why this was good at not so good, but eventually this is me and my emotions that were touched or not during a performance.
It is nice to hear that someone is willing to change their mind over something they previously held dear. Few people are willing to do that these days. Last person I can think of who did was "Hitch"
a couple of years ago I was completely into fashion and I was so thrilled about getting intensely involved on it, but nowadays big fashion brands just do nonsense.
Thank you for defining the difference between criticism and being a critic in non academic every day language in relation to your subject area. Ps I am a retired academic.
Teaching design has helped me expand my criticism lens. Young designers have the energy but they may lack the execution. So many times student would present their work and I wouldn’t immediately criticize. I’d ask them what they were thinking when they were trying to come up with several elements in their design. Hearing them talk through their process or even better when they showed me rough drafts was much more productive than me shitting on their design. Not fashion but I believe the access aspect can also apply to architecture. Drawing, videos, photos, VR experiences of a place can only do so much. You have to experience those spaces yourself. Unlike clothing or other products, there is only one of that piece. Because of the way the sun, elements and people operate within in the space, you can’t ever replicate that anywhere else in earth.
Suzy haircut don’t aligned with my taste but i must admit she’s create an unforgettable and authentic look. Beside her haircut, she’s is always well dress! And i love her a lot for being true to herself! By the way, you wear a very beautiful jacket! 👌🏼 Also very good video! Thanks 🙏🏼
Amazing video. I wonder the implications for criticizing some of the broader issues with the fashion industry at large (forced labor in luxury supply chains? Greenwashing? Even just shoddy workmanship?). If the Bernard Arnaults of the world have created an arts industry free from meaningful negative criticism, seems like we have a problem.
Great observation! PS as a southerner in a suburban tract home. I don’t know where you live but if know my architecture I love your old southern home. Looks like Charleston SC or Savannah GA. ❤
theres always an energy when bliss educates us on people like margiela, rick owens, rei kawakubo, and brands like undercover that shows that a fashion critic is more than the sum of their parts. watching bliss's videos isnt just a runway analysis, its an immersive experience that im grateful for.
Welcome in! If I could recommend your next video, the reeeally good ones are the ones where we can spend a lot of time on a single runway show. If you have time, check out -Prada: Fascism and Fashion -Issey Miyake isn’t Dead: He’s Immortal and -Rick Owens and Immortality: Spring 2023 Again, welcome in! I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments as you check out more videos 💫💫
It was about a year ago when I first stumbled upon one of your videos and I’m so thankful I did!!! You really did taught me a lot about insides of fashion. Thank you so much, I really appreciate it!!!
This is your channel’s best content. It's brilliantly written with insight backed by an enviable wealth of knowledge. You brim with passion without a hint of pretentiousness. I'm not over exaggerating when I say you’ve rekindled my love of fashion. Thank you, Bliss and bravo.
when you spoke apon derivitivity??? if that is a word??? I felt it because on first listen with cities aviv I thought he was just an "earl sweatshirt clone" but as I got more into his work I realized how his sound really came to be and how he himself kind of pioneered that certain abstract hiphop sound in his production. He is now my favorite musical artist
I get excited with you!!! Can't wait for the next videos. I've been stuck for a while trying to find how to dress to appear forgetting how much peaceful and miningful is to know the art behind clothes!! Thank youu
Now I am wondering if this phenomenon of being hypercritical about fashion is just a symptom, or indicative, of our culture (today's culture) as a whole. There's this idea that if you criticize something, that makes you smart...or it makes you look smart. It makes you look like you have access to info that the rest of us plebes don't. You hear it from politicians--Oh, you just *don't know*--meaning, "if you were as smart as I am, you'd be critical too." I think that's part of the reason why conspiracy theories gain so much traction--people buy into it because they don't want to look dumb. They lack common sense and healthy skepticism, but they want to seem as if they've got some insider info (though none exists bc it's bs), so they paradoxically buy into theories that are extraordinarily stupid. Maybe it's nothing new--the blind leading the blind, lemmings, etc.
I do think that negative-leaning criticism is important if it's warranted, that is one of the ways people can grow. There are levels to how this can be communicated, say, purely in an encouraging and optimistic manner, but there are other times when leaning negative gets your point across more succinctly and actually forces positive change. Also, it is embarrassing for critics to go back and edit their past reviews unless they keep the original review publicly accessible. I actually enjoy reading reviews from critics who didn't quite understand something, as it reflects the dominant mentality of its time. Finally, Suzy Menkes has a weirdly prudish view of how women and girls should dress, most evidently in her reactions and reviews of the past 2 years of Miu Miu shows, equating professional models to "sweet young things" who looked out of place wearing mini skirts. Even Kathy Horyn has made very out of place and completely unnecessary comments about the way modern women dress, specifically when it comes to expressing sexuality and showing skin. Their comments really made me reevaluate how I viewed them as critics.
This whole video made me think a lot about the latest sunnei show, where everyone had to rank the silhouette. Even if it was just an unjustified note out of ten, you could actually see what silhouette was a stand out, how a random silhouette without context would make someone feel on the spot, and how mixed or unanimous the opinons were. And having the note on the runway picture was pretty bold too, you’re buying a garment where you actually if people tend to like it or not. I think it was a genuinely healthy and interesting approach to fashion criticism, at least in this context
Thank you for bringing us the art of criticism in this video. Because criticism can be artfully expressed, that is a mark I look for in critiques. Show me what you know. Tell me why succinctly. Explain the comparison and contrast. Reactionary criticism is not fact, not a critique. That behavior is a false assumption that glides past education simply to entertain the critic and his/her/their following. I want intelligent and informed criticism. Reactions are lazy. New subscriber here.
weird the OED highlights criticism as commonly negative. I always thought criticism meant negative and positive and most important taking a close look... honestly the OED view is making criticism a bummer when it just ain't
There were multiple definitions for the word. Like, there was definitely a definition that was clearly applying to literary or art criticism. I probably should’ve specified that there were multiple. Also, I haven’t seen you comment in a while! Hope you’re doing well, Tim!
if someone gave 7/10 to the hermès margiela show, it should stand. if fashion tells us of/is our time, so does the reaction to it. capturing the present time is important. the current opinion about that show will change too. the past changes all the time.
i for one, love to go back to pitchfork's review of daft punk's "discovery" and read the idiot (idiot at that time at least) who didn't get "one more time", for being too repetitive. it's a good laugh.
i like the way pitchfork does it. there is an infuriating grade, and beneath it, there is serious critique, more or less in the ways you described. not that i think you should do that, or, actually, change anything to your approach.
THAT'S why you never say when things are obviously terrible. The "lumps" show was so obviously dog muck that I won't even bother getting the name right, but you'd risk missing everything else the designer and the brand ever showed if you said so.
This should be played at art school as a text book level video. Instructor and student should really be learning how to critical thinking rather than just seeing students presenting mediocre work and receiving boring feedback
Welcome in! If I could recommend your next video, the reeeally good ones are the ones where we can spend a lot of time on a single runway show. If you have time, check out -Prada: Fascism and Fashion -Issey Miyake isn’t Dead: He’s Immortal and -Rick Owens and Immortality: Spring 2023 Again, welcome in! I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments as you check out more videos 💫💫
“We get caught up in being cute and having fun, that we forget that there’s real work that’s necessary for our discipline to be taken seriously as a art form”
been watching you for roughly a year. Every video i learn something new.
Well said Bliss, thanks
Your curiosity and lack of negativity are exactly why I watch. "Fashion roast" type videos might be fun in the moment, but an hour afterwards are completely forgettable. Your work keeps me thinking long after the video has ended and adds to my knowledge base.
Very much agree, I watch those roasts every so often but couldn't tell you a thing about it after
💯 percent agree
Holy crap dude. 250k subs. I told you once that you’re gonna do great, and you are well on track to be one of the most well known fashion personalities on this platform. Keep going 💪🏽
I remember!! Thanks homie 💫💫
He has found his way into my time-line, and I am yet a fashun novice...
@@anikajoy5739 no one else does it like bliss: concise, witty, and relevant
I think I said this before, and I'll say it again: Thank you for all of this. I clicked on one of your videos on impulse, and, after being really impressed with how you describe it all, I subscribed and continued to watch all of your new videos. You've honestly taken me from "I don't really get fashion" to "Hey, this is actually really interesting!"
I’m honored 😌 thank you so much. I’m so glad the work is useful for you 💫💫
Me just now: Oh shit, an old Bliss Foster video that I somehow missed?
*Uploaded 25 minutes ago*
Every Monday at 11am EST! Except this week because Monday was a holiday haha
I'm japanese student lives in Paris who writes fashion critics for myself for now and for me true critics of visual art is not about evaluating something, but expressing its beauty as it is, or even more beautifully, in words, but without saying it's beautiful.
What you do is always amazing critics, can't wait to see you two again in this freezing Paris ;)
Bon chance 友達
You are very professional and fair in this review and in your disclaimers, but I expected something different from this video: maybe more humour, more images of fashions shows and less explanation, maybe actually negative reviews and why the collection was bad.
Criticising is not putting down. Criticising is giving reasons and offering comprehension. For any professional critic, it is much harder and much more rewarding to write an article full of genuine praise and provide all the reasons for such praise then to destroy an obvious piece of ***. And in your work you are doing exactly that, you've taken on a harder but a much more meaningful road.
I think social media has warped the idea of what criticism is. The algorithm pushes people up that do vapid negative shitting on things more. Maybe the amount of comments on those videos defending/agreeing letting the algo think “oh this is popular! Push it!” Not taking into account the actual context of the things being presented or discussed. This may also lead people who associate criticism with negativity and avoid criticism or critical thinking altogether. You can be both critical and positive.
I prefer to use the word critique to criticism
It’s interesting that you mention access because I watched a masssive amount of your content over the last few years and I felt the increase in quality once you where able to get into shows really noticeable. Your commentary ws really good before, but being able to go to shows really leveled it up. Especially when you get to talk to and interview bc designers is when the content is at its best imo
That means it done to me, thank you so much. We really work very hard to not allow this content to become stale.
You putting up a picture of Nelly Furtado instead of Ariana Grande after saying her name made me laugh so hard 😂
Ok, idk if this is fake deep or not, but i was just thinking about how in your margiela videos you always talk about how one of his core design things was deconstructing his clothes to show the process of its making, and i can't help but think that your editing style is exactly that same thing! The bloopers throughout, daniella's notes, it doesnt read as unfinished or sloppy editing because you're very intentionally cutting and adding notes in post. It heightens the final video and makes it more of an engaging and cohesive final project, EXACTLY like how deconstruction works in fashion. Thanks for another good video.
Not fake deep; A great analysis! And I thimk you just explained how a lot of great media formatted this way works so well!
Love this comment!
Wow damn! That’s a huge compliment! Thank you, I’m honored 😌
@@he.artshapedTHANK YOU for putting words on the feeling !!
This comment should be pinned 👏👏
The visual part is a treat! The clever, loving and humorous montage, it is always making me happy too, thank you both! ❤
Thank you so much for this video. It really resonates with how i feel about "art school" as an institution... hard to describe here exactly, but when I was doing my Masters in Fine Art (which a I actually left after disagreeing with the establishments approach to experiencing education and teaching in general) I felt this ranking and judgement that I'm sure most of all students feel. This ranking put in place to try to measure the objectively of a work of art that is often subjective, is quite frustrating. Here in France our bachelors degree in fine art is given on a strange system of merit that I believe is highly flawed, after a 3 years of study. Yet these three years iare not necessarily taken into account by the judges... Two judges (who have never seen your work and are often times picked at random by the establishment's higher higher ups) are assigned to the class and each student presents there work for 20 to 30 minutes. Years of work boiled down to this one instant, this presentation that if not explained by the creator in a way where the judge feels it is accessible and that they can connect with, your whole 3 years of work could be thrown down the drain. It is quite a strange situation to be in, and at the end you are left with a piece of glorified paper saying you've accomplished something or not.
I left my masters program because I realized that I much rather learn a skill that could help my creative process/progress. More of wanting to do an "apprentissage", I fell in love with ceramics and my passion for this atelier that was not my assigned "major" seemed to be a problem. everything needed to be explained with very little "recule" (very little stepping back). It can take years to understand why an artist chose to do what they did, and having to explain it as it was happening kind of took something out of it.
Its a long story but thats what I was thinking when I was watching this, as I am hand sewing a silk slip style skirt... because hand sewing right now has me reconciling my relationship to my body.
Your humour is very captivating, the deeply disturbing flashes of your gaping shirt for example are strangely hysterical & unsettling at the same time. It’s also quite refreshing to hear someone discuss fashion who doesn’t intonate like a contestant from drag race, ie gurrrl, the tea, fashown, gagging, serving blah blah. I’m enjoying this!
This is whyI love running in to you. 40 years in Fashion and most journalists will be nasty to show that they know what is good and you don’t. It’s too easy
As a 60-year-old person, you will always be successful, and that can be in different ways, if you are honest and authentic to yourself.
Encouragement means a lot to me, Lisa. Thank you 💫💫
I am naturally optimistic also, and your enthusiasm is one of my favorite parts of your channel.
Great video Bliss, I’m in my final semester of fashion school, what you said the last 7 minutes of the video is the exact feelings I’ve had the past 4 years I’ve been in school. I’m new to the fashion scene admittedly, I have an economics background and transitioned to fashion, because of that I like to take a more research approach to the art . I struggle to find any articles that truly go deep into the meaning of the art form, rather I just find opinions of people that think they said something meaningful. You’re right it’s really hard, but it’s the right thing. It would suck to see the art form be ruined because of things like this.
Oh man I was hoping for like a top 10 rundown but I got a speech instead 😂❤
Honestly I’ve never had too much of an interest in fashion until this most recent youtube deep dive. But boy is this relatable, it feels so hard to actually commit to any rigorous analysis when most discussions online boil down to the most surface level ratings of “good or bad”. It just feels like that kind of thinking totally misses the point of art (as you touched on eloquently).
Great stuff man, thoroughly enjoying this new education I’m receiving
U and fashion roadman are my favorite fashion ytbers, i just love how both of yall articulate things
I will be honest I did click on this (I am subscribed) because of the title....Whaaaaaat Mr. Foster never has a bad thing to say about fashion shows, what's this all about....and then you explained and I wasn't disappointed. This has always been a safe place to hear you gleefully talk about fashion shows, designers, fashion as art and otherwise and I may not always see it or agree, but it is always interesting point of view. Continued success!
Bliss, I have been BINGEING your content so this is right on time!!
Excellent 😌
Thank you for truly love what you do Bliss Foster and sharing it with the World through your wonderful channel! Thought of you as I watched the Emporio Armani Fall 20224 show as to me it seems that Giorgio Armani and His Team took inspiration from Rick Owens while keeping the Emporio Armani aesthetic.
Love this video. I'm so sick of the negative video essays about everything. Its in fashion in video games its everywhere its like everyone needs to be critical for no reason. And i think thats ruining art. I'm so happy you to hear you say all this everyone needs to hear this.
On your Hamlet journal example. I found a youtuber called Ellie Dashwood this week and all of the videos of her I have seen are bout Jane Austen and how masterfully she portrayed uppercrust Regency English people... and I have found great enjoyment on her content because it helps me see all the stuff I didn't understand when I first read some of her more famous books at like 16 years old. And Bernadette Banner is for me the GOAT of fashion historical reconstruction UA-cam and part of it is recontextualising the amount of laubour and tools and expectations of the time, in one of her videos she said that in Victorian hand sewing manuals it was recommended (ideally) that every stitch had like two threads width and I was horrified at the thought of sewing anything in such a manner. I can sew and embroider both with the machine and by hand (even if not very skillfully) there is no power in heaven or hell that can convince me to stitch even a single cuff with a a two thread width stitch... Fashion History/Analysis and history in general doesn't need to start being written centuries or decades after and I personally consider you and Daniella are making a very strong base for it that is and will be greatly appreciated. Fashion informataiment is good funny haha content but your videos are actually educational.
Good to know when I start a fashion brand bliss won’t roast me if I have a bad show
Honestly, for really new designers who are self funded, it’s high key shitty to put them down. Like, if someone wants to express themselves in one of the most expensive art mediums of all time. The least we can do is be polite
i love the behind the scenes in this video. Bliss could you maybe drop some merch (as cringey as merch sounds) cause i really want to support this channel but i really cant do subscriptions rn
This might be my favourite ever video of yours. As an aspiring fashion journalist, this has completely chsnged the way I view fashion criticism. This is definitely one of those videos that's gonna have me thinking for the next few days. Thank you for your content, Bliss!
Negativity is incredible important and necessary. It needs to be there to balance out the positivity in order to make us balanced and not deluded. Focusing only on positivity is for people with fragile and big egos who can't handle criticism. Designers need to be accept criticism and must never think they are beyond it. We can like and dislike, this is human nature and helps us navigate the world we live in. We shouldn't change the equilibrium of life. Negativity is fundamental and acceptable.
That pic of Animal Collective looks a lot like Four Tet 😅
👀
Recently the topic of criticism in art has been occupying me, however from another perspective. *Who the creators make their art for, critics or people?*
As someone who goes to theater and cinema a lot, I can make my own opinion and say it was 8/10, I liked it or I didn’t. And this is how movies make their box office, despite bad critics reviews. And the same goes for fashion, I guess, bc at the end of the day it’s people who are going to bring money to the designer/maison/lvmh…
There’s huge difference how professionals and general public perceive the same piece of art - a theater performance, a fashion show etc. And I’m grateful to critics for putting all the threads together and explaining to me why this was good at not so good, but eventually this is me and my emotions that were touched or not during a performance.
It is nice to hear that someone is willing to change their mind over something they previously held dear. Few people are willing to do that these days. Last person I can think of who did was "Hitch"
a couple of years ago I was completely into fashion and I was so thrilled about getting intensely involved on it, but nowadays big fashion brands just do nonsense.
Thank you for defining the difference between criticism and being a critic in non academic every day language in relation to your subject area. Ps I am a retired academic.
Teaching design has helped me expand my criticism lens. Young designers have the energy but they may lack the execution. So many times student would present their work and I wouldn’t immediately criticize. I’d ask them what they were thinking when they were trying to come up with several elements in their design. Hearing them talk through their process or even better when they showed me rough drafts was much more productive than me shitting on their design.
Not fashion but I believe the access aspect can also apply to architecture. Drawing, videos, photos, VR experiences of a place can only do so much. You have to experience those spaces yourself. Unlike clothing or other products, there is only one of that piece. Because of the way the sun, elements and people operate within in the space, you can’t ever replicate that anywhere else in earth.
Suzy haircut don’t aligned with my taste but i must admit she’s create an unforgettable and authentic look. Beside her haircut, she’s is always well dress! And i love her a lot for being true to herself!
By the way, you wear a very beautiful jacket! 👌🏼
Also very good video! Thanks 🙏🏼
Thanks for the support!
Don't be judgmental, be curious. Words to live by...
Amazing video. I wonder the implications for criticizing some of the broader issues with the fashion industry at large (forced labor in luxury supply chains? Greenwashing? Even just shoddy workmanship?).
If the Bernard Arnaults of the world have created an arts industry free from meaningful negative criticism, seems like we have a problem.
So upset that there were no secret treasures after the minute long end card
Great observation!
PS as a southerner in a suburban tract home. I don’t know where you live but if know my architecture I love your old southern home. Looks like Charleston SC or Savannah GA. ❤
theres always an energy when bliss educates us on people like margiela, rick owens, rei kawakubo, and brands like undercover that shows that a fashion critic is more than the sum of their parts. watching bliss's videos isnt just a runway analysis, its an immersive experience that im grateful for.
So happy to have found your channel dude, there's nothing else like it, and you do it so well. Thank you for your brilliant work.
Welcome in! If I could recommend your next video, the reeeally good ones are the ones where we can spend a lot of time on a single runway show. If you have time, check out
-Prada: Fascism and Fashion
-Issey Miyake isn’t Dead: He’s Immortal
and
-Rick Owens and Immortality: Spring 2023
Again, welcome in! I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments as you check out more videos 💫💫
It was about a year ago when I first stumbled upon one of your videos and I’m so thankful I did!!! You really did taught me a lot about insides of fashion. Thank you so much, I really appreciate it!!!
This is your channel’s best content. It's brilliantly written with insight backed by an enviable wealth of knowledge. You brim with passion without a hint of pretentiousness. I'm not over exaggerating when I say you’ve rekindled my love of fashion. Thank you, Bliss and bravo.
Bliss, tell me that was meant to be a visual gag by inserting a photo of Nelly Furtado while mentioning Ariana Grande 🙃
lol yes, that’s not animal collective either
@@BlissFoster not a whole lot of overlap in those fanbases to understand the context so it seems to have flown over some heads 😂
As always, your video isn't what i thought it would be before watching it. Keep up the good work Bliss! 😊
when you spoke apon derivitivity??? if that is a word??? I felt it because on first listen with cities aviv I thought he was just an "earl sweatshirt clone" but as I got more into his work I realized how his sound really came to be and how he himself kind of pioneered that certain abstract hiphop sound in his production. He is now my favorite musical artist
I get excited with you!!! Can't wait for the next videos. I've been stuck for a while trying to find how to dress to appear forgetting how much peaceful and miningful is to know the art behind clothes!! Thank youu
Now I am wondering if this phenomenon of being hypercritical about fashion is just a symptom, or indicative, of our culture (today's culture) as a whole. There's this idea that if you criticize something, that makes you smart...or it makes you look smart. It makes you look like you have access to info that the rest of us plebes don't. You hear it from politicians--Oh, you just *don't know*--meaning, "if you were as smart as I am, you'd be critical too." I think that's part of the reason why conspiracy theories gain so much traction--people buy into it because they don't want to look dumb. They lack common sense and healthy skepticism, but they want to seem as if they've got some insider info (though none exists bc it's bs), so they paradoxically buy into theories that are extraordinarily stupid. Maybe it's nothing new--the blind leading the blind, lemmings, etc.
Oh man u don't like camp. That makes sense honestly, but boy do I have really campy ideas. My brain is the campsite with s'mores and ghost stories
My head is clear, my heart is pure. I am ready for camp 🧘
Nah uh I'm full of cringe and bad ideas
The Hermes video was the best of the year SO FAR.
I do think that negative-leaning criticism is important if it's warranted, that is one of the ways people can grow. There are levels to how this can be communicated, say, purely in an encouraging and optimistic manner, but there are other times when leaning negative gets your point across more succinctly and actually forces positive change. Also, it is embarrassing for critics to go back and edit their past reviews unless they keep the original review publicly accessible. I actually enjoy reading reviews from critics who didn't quite understand something, as it reflects the dominant mentality of its time. Finally, Suzy Menkes has a weirdly prudish view of how women and girls should dress, most evidently in her reactions and reviews of the past 2 years of Miu Miu shows, equating professional models to "sweet young things" who looked out of place wearing mini skirts. Even Kathy Horyn has made very out of place and completely unnecessary comments about the way modern women dress, specifically when it comes to expressing sexuality and showing skin. Their comments really made me reevaluate how I viewed them as critics.
SHOUT OUT WALT WITMAN GAY ICON REGARDLESS
this spiel at 19:00 is chock full of philosopchial concepts man
Ariana Grande, the artist formerly known as Nelly Furtado.
This whole video made me think a lot about the latest sunnei show, where everyone had to rank the silhouette. Even if it was just an unjustified note out of ten, you could actually see what silhouette was a stand out, how a random silhouette without context would make someone feel on the spot, and how mixed or unanimous the opinons were. And having the note on the runway picture was pretty bold too, you’re buying a garment where you actually if people tend to like it or not. I think it was a genuinely healthy and interesting approach to fashion criticism, at least in this context
“No you’re so sweet to me all the time. Thank you.”🥹🥹🥹🥹YALLS RELATIONSHIP IS SO CUTE
reductive and distracting. I totally agree, blind criticism limits space
Thank you for bringing us the art of criticism in this video. Because criticism can be artfully expressed, that is a mark I look for in critiques. Show me what you know. Tell me why succinctly. Explain the comparison and contrast. Reactionary criticism is not fact, not a critique. That behavior is a false assumption that glides past education simply to entertain the critic and his/her/their following. I want intelligent and informed criticism. Reactions are lazy. New subscriber here.
weird the OED highlights criticism as commonly negative. I always thought criticism meant negative and positive and most important taking a close look... honestly the OED view is making criticism a bummer when it just ain't
There were multiple definitions for the word. Like, there was definitely a definition that was clearly applying to literary or art criticism. I probably should’ve specified that there were multiple. Also, I haven’t seen you comment in a while! Hope you’re doing well, Tim!
I like it when he yells at me 🥹
Can’t wait for you to reach one million subscribers you’re almost there
I'm drawing a blank. What's the 4th fashion capital you mentioned?
The fashion caps are NYC, London, Milan, and Paris 💫💫
6:12 is THAT Ariana? You’re joking right that’s another actress 😂
the Philosophical Perspectives on Fashion book is so pricey - if anyone has any leads on where to find a cheap copy, i would greatly appreciate it
Wait really? I got mine for like $30 🤔
@@BlissFoster here in the UK it's 100 minimum!
@@odysseyofiska ugh, price has spiked in the US too 😔 sorry homie
@@BlissFoster that's ok - I'll see if I can find it at the library. I read all your recs :)
So rich, inspiring and full of references…. What an amazing video!
25:04 has to be used as a meme template. Bliss is the best UA-cam Critic rn. Keep it up mate!🤌
shoutout Walt Whitman, gay icon!!!
if someone gave 7/10 to the hermès margiela show, it should stand. if fashion tells us of/is our time, so does the reaction to it. capturing the present time is important. the current opinion about that show will change too. the past changes all the time.
i for one, love to go back to pitchfork's review of daft punk's "discovery" and read the idiot (idiot at that time at least) who didn't get "one more time", for being too repetitive. it's a good laugh.
This was such an incredible video that can be applied to so many things. Thank you!
Mentions Ariana and animal collective but shows Nelly and four tet Kieran 😂🤣
i like the way pitchfork does it. there is an infuriating grade, and beneath it, there is serious critique, more or less in the ways you described. not that i think you should do that, or, actually, change anything to your approach.
i also like the color green💚🌳🌳🍀 and electronic music 🎵and your videos🙃
Not a picture of Nelly furtado when you said Arianna grande 😂😂😂😂
I honestly so glad i subscribed. This channel, I feel is one of the most genuine.
Off topic but been following you for quite some time and loving the hair journey
Tedd Lasso said Be Curious Not Judgmental, but idk if he said it first :)
Haha he didn’t. I first heard it ascribed to Whitman in college back in 2011 💫💫
@@BlissFoster amazing!! Love learning that kind of stuff, thanks :) my original comment should have said “Ted Lasso *also* said”
Watched on Patreon. Comment for algorithm
I appreciate it 💫💫
Basically Mourinho's "If I speak I'm in big trouble" 🤐🤐
that one enthusiastic friend you invite to dinner at a resto who talks about how much he loves turtles XD lol
Yea…I’m uh….not fun at parties 😅
Great content, the fabric quality of your jacket is distracting me. Very nice
Talking facts for nearly 30 min. What a great and serious episode!
I love that you did not let yourself live about this shirt hole. Very much recovering perfectionist behavior 😂
I thought « oh, why not » seeing the thumbnail.
And then it was great. And better than what I had imagined. Obviously it was, what did I expect.
6:12 that is Canadian icon Nelly Furtado! not Arianna Grande!
Thank you for this and well said. So appreciative of the work and grateful. Thank you and thank you again.
Shoutout Walt Whiteman, gay icon !
I loved this breakdown. Very well said.
Christopher, that is
THAT'S why you never say when things are obviously terrible. The "lumps" show was so obviously dog muck that I won't even bother getting the name right, but you'd risk missing everything else the designer and the brand ever showed if you said so.
I actually really like that collection :)
That's Kieran Hebden aka Four Tet not Animal Collective
aka ⣎⡇ꉺლ༽இ•̛)ྀ◞ ༎ຶ ༽ৣৢ؞ৢ؞ؖ ꉺლ
I believe that's the point... That he's clueless lol. He used a pic of Nelly Furtado when mentioning Ariana too. Context!
I believe you could be right, thanks@@AlexAxford7
Yup haha. I’m obsessed with Animal Collective and Four Tet, I was wondering if anyone would catch it lol
Hell yea, another true Four Tet fan! 💫💫
broooo I just submitted my yearbook quote saying it's from Walt Whitman it's so over
I got my mom to start watching you! Love you bliss!
great content , the greatness... thank you Bliss! We love you
15:00 omg, yes it will. Yes.
many thganks for your professional quality videos.
This should be played at art school as a text book level video. Instructor and student should really be learning how to critical thinking rather than just seeing students presenting mediocre work and receiving boring feedback
New fan here! Thank you for all you do
Welcome in! If I could recommend your next video, the reeeally good ones are the ones where we can spend a lot of time on a single runway show. If you have time, check out
-Prada: Fascism and Fashion
-Issey Miyake isn’t Dead: He’s Immortal
and
-Rick Owens and Immortality: Spring 2023
Again, welcome in! I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments as you check out more videos 💫💫
The closeups of your chest had me rollin 😂