A Child Of The Jago 2010 SPRING/SUMMER MEN'S COLLECTION " Terrorist "
A Child Of The Jago (ア チャイルド オブ ザ ジャゴー) 2010 S/S SEASON THEME 『 Terrorist 』
A Child Of The Jago is a child of the street. The destitute and illegitimate progeny of a hopelessly rundown environment.
In the case of Joseph Corre and Simon "Barnzley" Armitage, the street
is Great Eastern and the physical environment is a former Victorian
slum in East London where the alley wise hero of Arthur Morrison's
book, A Child of the Jago, takes place. But the spiritual environment
that has catalysed Corre and Armitage's enterprise is an even more
threatening and sprawling slum, that of the creatively impoverished
and commercially corrupt homogeny represented by the menswear
status quo.
Corre and Armitage are acutely aware that the world their new child
is entering will offer it no sympathy and give it no quarter. A Child of the
Jago isn't being raised to expect a warm welcome. It's being brought up
to cause trouble while it contrives to raise the bar.
The zeal for agitation is a natural extension of the pair's stylistic inspirations.
The attitude reflects the sartorial excesses of the original
dandy and the raw unpredictable razor's edge of Rock & Roll stitched
together with the excruciatingly rigorous standards of the Saville Row
tailoring tradition. This all makes for a volatile cocktail of no-rules merchandising.
Milkman jackets reminiscent of work wear's golden age
are presented alongside Scottish cashmere and fine shirting crafted in
Jermyn Street factories. At the same time the tyranny of forced fashion
"cycles" and industrially contrived "trends" receive a brutal Liverpool
kiss-off, neutralised and dismissed as waste-creating crutches habitually
brandished by brain-dead corporations well and truly only in it for
the money.
But neither Corre nor Armitage are interested in disposable
rebellion or a shallow veneer of style. They don't believe standards of
quality have been lost so much as they have been stolen, kidnapped,
hijacked and brutalised by the mainstream fashion system. And
they clearly don't care how much shoe leather is worn away in their
efforts to free quality from its current confinement. They have wired
together a clandestine alternative network that unifies select Saville
Row tailors with irreverent young talents from Japan's best fashion
academies. They have identified hole-in-the-wall suppliers of ultrapremium
deadstock menswear fabrics and implicated them deep
within their plot. Maneuvers that combine with their abandonment
of artificial fashion cycles and grant them access to the best pure
wools, rich silks, sharp gabardines, rugged twills and a host of oneof-
a-kind yard goods of unrivalled quality that can otherwise stack
up in the dust left by built-in-obsolescence and an inefficient and
cynical marketing system.
Almost by accident their provocative approach ensures their own
product, the dangerously named "Terrorist" collection, bears certain
highly desirable market characteristics.
Intentionally Local and Accidently Sustainable
It is good for the ecology if folks are granted access to quality and discontinue
thinking of clothing as disposable. Garments created with care
from the best locally produced material the way Corre and Armitage are
making them get better with age, not worse. The notion that waste could
be dramatically reduced merely by a systematic revolt against the calculated
cycling of prepackaged trends is not theoretical, it's very definitely
real. Not afraid to antagonise a bully, their child of the Jago is doing its
part right in their own backyard. If customers adopted this attitude en
masse it would doubtless herald the end of waste in fashion altogether.
Goliath would fall and David would remain standing and David would
be better dressed than ever
Exclusive and Richly Storied
It is also good for customers to gain access to something genuinely
unique. As individual as a human heart, Corre and Armitage's designs
are rendered in fabric combinations that could literally never be
reproduced. So if desire for exclusivity and products with real narrative
are on the rise, then A Child Of The Jago is stomping impertinently in
the right direction.
The highly combustible flashpoint of the concept is the store itself.
Designed after scenic illustrations of Hogarth's Gin Lane, the finished
space provides a languid and lurid framework for the full Terrorist
collection as well as a dedicated bespoke tailoring service that employs
the same remarkable dead stock fabrics.
The basement houses a lush gallery of carefully curated vintage that
is treated as a purebred cousin and sold right alongside their own
creations. One can expect to see everything from Napoleonic uniforms
to antique French work wear along with complimenting curiosa like the
leather-and-brass artificial leg of a long dead Hell's Angel gang member,
classic Rock & Roll 45s and 12" disco singles and an extensive library of
out-of-print outré literature and underground artifacts from all across
Europe. There is a bit of the feeling that you've stumbled across some
nameless nobility on the downslide, who has been forced to sell off the
family silver.
A Child Of The Jago's concept and Corre and Armitage's Terrorist
menswear label carry the distinct odour of something incendiary and
there's a chance something really might burn. But the most flammable
materials in its path seem to be the creative mediocrity and depressing
absence of quality that have grown like dry weeds across the current
fashion landscape. If this detritus burns off it will only serve to enrich
the earth and ensure the new soil is fertile enough to nourish the stylistic
bravery and deep quality that their new vision proposes.
A Child Of The Jago (ア チャイルド オブ ザ ジャゴー)
Designer
Simon “Barnzley” Armitage and Joseph Corre
A child of the jago was founded in 2007 by Simon “Barnzley” Armitage and Joseph Corre. As long standing friends they have for many years been making clothing for them selves as individuals using end of line luxury wools cashmeres and cottons. after many years of dressing up and showing off to each other they decided to open a store in the east end within walking distance of the local tailors shops. A Child Of The Jago is a child of the street. The destitute and illegitimate progeny of a hopelessly rundown environmen
In the case of Joseph Corre and Simon “Barnzley” Armitage the street is Great Eastern and the physical environment is a former Victorian slum in East London where the alley wise hero of Arthur Morrison’s book A Child of the Jago takes place. But the spiritual environment that has catalyzed Corre and Armitage’s enterprise is an even more threatening and sprawling slum that of the creatively impoverished and commercially corrupt homogeny represented by the menswear status quo.
Corre and Armitage are acutely aware that the world their new child is entering will offer it no sympathy and give it no quarter. A Child of the Jago isn’t being raised to expect a warm welcome. It’s being brought up to cause trouble while it contrives to raises the bar.
A Child Of The Jago (ア チャイルド オブ ザ ジャゴー)取り扱い店
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