Ian Berry X Jonathan Christopher - Secret Garden at Textil Museet by Jan Berg


To celebrate the exhibition being shown at Textil Museet - The Textile Museum Of Sweden, Ian Berry had guest designers interpret and comment his work. Dutch designer Jonathan Christopher has created garments inspired by the most notable bodies of work; Behind Closed DoorsHotel California, the American Jean and The Secret Garden.


Residui- leftover

Based on the painting of the ‘Bound’ portrait. The waste we create and ship off to other countries to dispose of is what inspired these pieces. Countries finding use of the garbage of others. This garment is made with the offcuts of the looms.

Where this material is usually discarded there is a lot of beauty in it, yet it is thrown with little thought. Knitted to make a dress and partially hand dipped in natural indigo. Combined with the head wrap made of foam indigo dyed denim and washed with eco bleach type wash. 


Ian Berry Jonathan Christopher dutch denim designer collar Textil Museet

Cunae- cradle

Based on the Secret Garden. But now the issues are no longer a secret. Everything we have and take starts from nature, we alter, we add, and we consume. Once we have used it, it will return to nature with all the harmful chemicals and additives we used.

The dress is representing mother nature with her vines connecting the circle of life. Where the butterflies symbolise the butterfly effect we have on mother nature. We create our own toxic environment where our harmful practices aren’t able to be undone by nature and things like microplastics are found in the animals, soils and plants.

denim butterfly Ian berry art

photos by Boras Punkt

Ian Berry Denim installation art dress Jonathan Christopher

Ian Berry Material world Textil Museet Jonathan Christopher

Momentum- moment

Based on the changing of the city and the lines in the New York pieces from the American Jean.

The movement in the pieces, the ever-changing views and the excitement of the city is what inspired this piece. The garment is made with a deadstock denim from former itv denim (now pg denim) the bomber jacket has parts that can be taken off and changed with a lacing detail with thick rope. The city is ever changing and so is this jacket, also in the piece of the subway there are a lot of fold in the fabric, and to exaggerate it there is a pull up construction in the sleeve.


Jonathan Christopher Ian Berry PG denim italy
jonathan Christopher ian berry PG denim Textil Museet

Verso – reflect

Based on the reflection of light bouncing off the water in the pool pieces from Hotel California.

The jacket and pants are made with pg denim’s flock denim, recycled viscose flock on a indigo base, lasered with an hand drawn print. The beauty of the material is the more the wearer uses it, the more the denim will come through. The garments are shaped to style swimming floats around the arms and around the pants. The top underneath is created with a foam indigo dyed denim and washed with eco bleach type wash, and resembles a bathing suit bouncing off the light on the water.


jonathan Christopher ian berry PG denim

Abdo-conceal

Based on Behind Closed Doors, the intricate tiles on the floors inside these melancholy beautiful homes. But it also challenges the hidden feeling in the faces of the people in it. The feeling of these pieces inspired to make this jacket and sweater. The top layer hiding away all the intricate handcut pieces that make up a tiled jacket underneath. The jacket is made from foam indigo dyed denim and washed with an eco bleach wash and the tiles cut of old discarded denims, mixed with pg denim’s flock denim. It show you more and more of the beauty underneath the more it’s worn. It adds beauty into the garment with wear. Wearing it and tearing it more is like an archeological finding that true beauty is hidden.

Jonathan Christopher denim bomber dutch denim designer Ian Berry material world
Jonathan Christopher denim bomber jacket

Jonathan Christopher (Hofwegen) Celestial Risher is a menswear designer who graduated from the Willem de Kooning Academy in 2009. He then went on to do his MA at Artez in Arnhem. 

Next to his own brand, Jonathan Christopher, he has worked for brands such as Karl Lagerfeld and was chosen by Marc Jacobs to be one of the five finalists for Designer for Tomorrow by Peek en Cloppenburg.

In 2014 he won the very first Global Denim Awards and in 2015 he won the Woolmark European Finals.

He now works on launching St.Ape, basing the idea around using dead-stock fabrics from high end designers, to make his collections of limited editions, like he has throughout his career. Reusing old materials makes him a perfect and authentic collaborator for Ian Berry. 

jonathan@jonathanchristopher.nl

https://www.jonathanchristopher.nl/index.php/about