

Anonyme dresses the body as both participant and witness in fashion's quiet fires—a faceless stand-in for the consumer who fuels the burn and the recipient who must finally face it. Deconstructed shirts and skirts fuse into a silhouette without identity: black and white planes colliding like denial meeting consequence, seams split open like evidence salvaged from a system that destroys what it cannot sell.
The hood erases the wearer into a non-figure —neither villain nor victim, just another interchangeable part in the machinery of excess. Cuts behave like scorch marks, warped volumes echo heat-bent architecture, and the garment hangs between violence and vacancy, mindless and meticulous, anonymous and exposed.
It's a uniform for the one who could be anyone. A body that stands in for all bodies.
Anonyme becomes the mirror we avoid-the form that stands in the face of the truth we helped create, even when we pretend we weren't looking.


Amanda Landingham @amandilandi
the fact that Burberry burnt almost $40 million worth of clothes & beauty is disgusting to me. that could've been donated to women's shelters &to people that need clothes &such &to people that need that to get jobs &to get on their feet but nope, let's burn it all like jerks
5:41 PM - Jul 19, 2018
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2 chemises hommes

une jupe
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