I thought some of you might be interested in this.
 - Tamara

New York Times

July 27, 2006

The Heyday of the Dead
By DAVID COLMAN

YES, it’s July. The sun’s shining. People are heading
to the beach or just out, to catch some UV, drink some
Mountain Dew and indulge in some good clean summer
fun.
But what is that little black cloud drifting across
the sun? Will it ruin our picnic, like ants or a
motorcycle gang? Heaven protect us ... a skull? Not
one, but a sea of them! Ah, but ere it comes near, it
is clear: it will barely cast a pall.
If it was not clear a year or two ago, when the skull
motif cropped up on battered
Herman-Melville-meets-Edgar-Allan-Poe T-shirts made by
Rogues Gallery, on costly cashmere sweaters by Lucien
Pellat-Finet, on the perforated uppers of the wingtips
made by the men’s wear line Barker Black, it is now.
What only recently seemed clever and stylish — I’m
wearing a skull! I’m baaaaad! — has shifted into
overdrive, if not overkill.
Beyond the sea of skull wear — belts, T-shirts, ties —
there are umbrellas, sneakers, swimsuits, packing
tape, party lights, even a skull-branded line of hand
tools. One company has made a skull toilet brush and
caddy (with a molded-plastic femur bone for a handle).
This summer Damien Hirst announced that he will make a
life-size skull, cast in platinum and adorned with
8,000 diamonds.
If it seems harmless, well, there you have it. With
the full force of the American consumer marketing
establishment behind it, the skull has lost virtually
all of its fearsome outsider meaning. It has become
the Happy Face of the 2000’s. When the mid-1980’s
proto-Goth group the Ministry sang “Every Day Is
Halloween,” this was not quite what they had in mind.
“This is such a huge gripe of mine,” said Voltaire, a
musician in New York and the author of “What is Goth?”
(Weiser Books, 2004), a kind of “Preppy Handbook” for
the living dead. “Throughout hundreds of years of
history, what the skull has communicated is, ‘I am
dangerous.’ That’s where the irony is. You can buy
dangerous for $11.99 at Kmart.”
For years Voltaire was the happy owner of several
skull-motif sweaters hand-knit by an eccentric
Englishwoman. He recounted that a woman stopped him
the other day on an East Village street to admire the
one he was wearing. “She said: ‘I love your sweater.
Is it Ralph Lauren?’ Then I found out that Ralph
Lauren has a whole store that sells skull stuff.”
Well, not for long he doesn’t. At Rugby, the chain of
collegiate-style stores Mr. Lauren rolled out only
last year, the shirts are embroidered not with a polo
player but a skull. However, the logo is already being
scaled back (though not dropped entirely), a spokesman
said.
“It’s a pity it’s so commercial now,” Mr. Pellat-Finet
said. For more than five years, he has splashed
oversize skull graphics — sporting, say, Mickey Mouse
ears — on his sweaters. “Maybe Wal-Mart will replace
their smiley-face with a tête de mort,” he added,
using the French term for skull. “It’s lost its
meaning.”
Well, it still has one meaning for Mr. Pellat-Finet,
whose latest skull sweaters are embellished with Afros
and top hats, among other images. Asked if he will
stop using the motif, he responded with a chuckle:
“No, no, no. It’s my best seller!”
Other designers appear to have similarly mixed
feelings: on one hand, they are confronted with skull
saturation; on the other, skulls are ringing the
dinner bell louder than ever. Alexander McQueen’s fall
men’s wear show did not play up skull imagery on the
runway — surely the critics would be bored — but there
are plenty back in the showroom, on sports coats, polo
shirts and trousers. His $210 skull-print silk scarf
is one of the best-selling items on the men’s designer
floor at Barneys New York.
“We’ve sold 400 since May,” said Timothy Elliott, a
Barneys spokesman. “We sell them as fast as they come
in.”
Many people point to the “Pirates of the Caribbean”
franchise as fuel for skullmania. But the skull’s
ascent to the logo throne has more to it and behind it
than a Disney marketing campaign. Reminiscent of the
vogue for angels a decade or more ago — remember how
the little winged creatures were everywhere? — the
skull neatly encapsulates a cultural moment in terms
both precise and vague.
It is also the product of potent economic forces. The
proliferation of skulls has paralleled the rise of the
Hot Topic clothing chain. Begun 17 years ago in
Southern California, Hot Topic is a
680-stores-in-50-states phenomenon based on the simple
idea of selling music-related clothing and accessories
— punk studded wristbands, heavy-metal T-shirts and
lately, lots and lots of skulls — to suburban
teenagers who would otherwise have to visit an urban
clothing boutique for such goodies.
“Have we brought skulls to the mall?” said Cindy
Levitt, the vice president for marketing at Hot Topic.
“Absolutely. But skulls are a rock icon. We’ve always
had them. We see this as more of a fashion trend.”
Still, Ms. Levitt agreed that the skull is not what it
used to be. “It’s no longer threatening,” she said.
“Anyone will wear a skull now.”
The inventory at Hot Topic, which caters to music fans
of all stripes, points up another facet of the skull’s
allure, its vagueness. Cherished as an icon by several
rock genres, it communicates many potential meanings
without specifying any single one: the skull as style
hedge.
“The skull is all-purpose,” said Sasha Frere-Jones, a
music critic at The New Yorker. “It simultaneously
refers to horror movies, to the Misfits and, by
extension, all punk rock, and to a generalized culture
of blackness and spookiness and the larger, mall-Goth
culture.” So, he said, “if you’re really at heart a
Goth, but you have friends who are into metal and
punk, you can rock the skulls and be friends with all
of them.”
Or in fashionspeak: skulls — fun, flexible, easy,
breezy!
It is a different way of thinking of one of history’s
most formidable images, seen in thousands of years of
art and a symbol integral to Mexican culture. Robert
Rosenblum, a professor of fine arts at New York
University, explained that the skull is central to the
vanitas, a genre of still-life painting in which
temporal pleasures are juxtaposed with a skull. “The
vanitas includes the skull as a reminder that death is
everywhere,” he said, “as a cutting edge to too much
contentment with the here and now.”
Perhaps the Manhattan hostess who bought a $4,140 set
of 12 sterling-silver skull place-card holders by the
jeweler Douglas Little wanted to convey that message
to her guests. (Supercute touch: the place cards are
clenched between the hinged jaws.) Or maybe not; she
declined to be interviewed.
The skull as memento mori is important to Philip
Crangi, a fashionable jeweler in Manhattan known for a
pared-down modernized take on 19th-century morbidity.
“I use it in a Victorian or Latin sense,” he said,
“where it meant that life is short and death is the
great equalizer, so stop your whining and get on with
it.”
In his view skulls are not less threatening because a
chic jeweler is casting them in precious metal but
because, in an age when slasher films are top
grossers, death itself has become less threatening.
“In the 19th century, when people died, they were laid
out in the living room,” he said. “I think we’ve lost
that connection to death.”
For others, the skull is about youth, not death,
losing its sting. Banks Violette, an artist whose
fascination with heavy metal imagery won him a show at
the Whitney Museum last summer, is never happy to see
cherished symbols of teen angst treated blithely.
“It’s always an inward flinch,” he said. “People
create this little world where they try to negotiate
their own sense of alienation, then it gets pulled
apart.” He added that because such symbols are
associated with youth culture, they are often viewed
as superficial and treated cynically by companies that
market to young people.
Yet as consumers young and old tire of being marketed
to, the skull appears to offer a kind of antidote: the
ultimate unbrand, one that belongs to no one.
Curiously, then, what began as an outlaw anti-logo may
as well be viewed as the death rattle of an
underground aesthetic.
“The skull was one of the last frontiers,” said Rick
Owens, the designer known for his glamorized Goth
style. “There’s no way to make yourself edgy anymore.”
Even so, he is planning on selling skulls — real ones
— in “natural and black” in his new Paris boutique.
“Skulls are kind of timeless,” he said, deadpan as it
gets.
Ah, well. Eat, drink and be trendy. Tomorrow we die.

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/27/fashion/27SKULLS.html?th&emc=th




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