Fashion is made to become unfashionable. I design my clothes always for tomorrow. Already I would throw out nearly everything in this collection.
–Coco Chanel, Life magazine (August 1957)
And, after all, what is a fashion? From the artistic point of view, it is usually a form of ugliness so intolerable that we have to alter it every six months.
–Oscar Wilde, The Philosophy of Dress, The New-York Tribune, 1885
This post came about in a weird way this morning. Or, at least, I think it will come about. It’s still taking shape in my head.
I began with no idea as to what to write this morning, thinking it might be a good day to take a break. I’ve posted something every morning for something like 75 days now which is a little unusual, even for me. It might be some sort of response to my treatment, a psychological recognition that our time here is limited, making me want to blurt out what I have to say now because there may not be many tomorrows.
We won’t get into that now.
Getting back to this post, I knew that even though I had no ideas, I was going to play Eli’s Coming, the Laura Nyro song that was a big radio hit for Three Dog Night in 1969. The reason for this was that one of the vocalists for the band, Chuck Negron, died Monday at the age of 83.
Watching the video below from 1969 reminded me of the fashion of that time and into the 70’s, particularly the striped bell bottoms worn by Danny Hutton. I never had striped bell bottoms at the time but it did remind me of a pair of bell bottoms that I did own.
I bought them at Harold’s Army Navy store in downtown Elmira. Harold’s was the cool place to buys jeans at the time, with a widely known reputation. When the Grand Prix teams hit Watkins Glen every year many headed to Harold’s to buy the Levis that were hard to obtain in Europe at that time. Not long after this time, Tommy Hilfiger made his first foray into the world of fashion, opening his People’s Place store a few blocks away from Harold’s.
I would go into Harold’s after school during my Junior High days, looking for bargains. One day, I found what I thought at the moment might be the greatest pants ever. They were maroon bell bottoms and the price was great, too low to pass up. They would certainly look cool on me as I walked down the hallways of Ernie Davis Junior High.
And maybe they did. All I can remember is that they were the stupidest pants I ever came across. They had no zipper. They had a button fly, which is okay in itself. However, this pair of pants had two sets of button flies, one running up the top of each thigh, forming a big square flap at the front. It was a pain in the butt fiddling with the eight buttons to simply get the damn things on, and going to the bathroom took on a greater urgency. Every trip to the toilet was an ordeal.
But being a dumb kid, this didn’t keep me from wearing these awful pants. I lived with its drawbacks and discomfort all for the sake of feeling cool. It wasn’t my first or last experience with trying to stay fashionable back then. These days, I make no effort at all to wear what the cool kids wear. I am as unfashionable as they come.
I often equate this with my work. It has been fashionable at several points in my career, the flavor of the month. It seems like everything I put out flies off the walls. And that is great. Who doesn’t enjoy that? But I realized years ago that that kind of reaction is ephemeral. I’ve seen it with my work and with the dozens of other artists who replaced me as the then flavor of the month. Many, if not most, are not even with those galleries where they once shined brightly for a short time. Most are still trying to satisfy the appetites of others.
I realized that I couldn’t remain the flavor of the month all the time. Trying to do so meant that I would forever be trying to satisfy the ever-changing appetite of a fickle public. That is an impossible task. It also goes against whatever idea of artistic integrity I maintain. I wouldn’t try to change my work to please others.
I would cook for myself, first and foremost. If others like the flavor, they are welcome at my table.
It might not be the fashion of the moment, the flavor of the month. But that would be okay with me. I would just do what I do and do it as well as I can with a consistent level of quality. I saw my work as being like a good pair of jeans. Sturdy, comfortable, and fitting into most any situation. Dependable and never thrown into the trash heap of fashion.
Wasn’t planning on writing about this when I set out from the house this morning. But there you go. You never know what the day will bring you.
Here’s Eli’s Coming. The late Chuck Negron is to the far left.
Better hide your heart…











