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KIRSTEN ALBRECHT

THE COLOUR GREEN.  Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, December 2014.

Green.. the colour of life, renewal, nature, and energy, of growth, harmony,
freshness, safety, fertility, and environment.

"Green is the grass and the watermelon skin, fourth colour in the rainbow, the emeralds in a ring."
[Extract from the poem GREEN by James Hörner]



Kirsten Albrecht is the managing director of Kozminsky, a learned scholar of psychotherapy, a mother to four, a grand-mother to two.
Her life experience, her expertise in reading people is both inspiring to watch and also to partake in. The depth of her appreciation of ‘substance’ is infectious and her love for 'the colour green’ is a perfect match for her grain.

TIME WITH JOAN was fortunate to witness the beauty of the immense collection of Kokeshi on parade at Kirsten's home, some 1000 in total, this home a nest for much beauty and abundance. The idea of looking from outside-in to Kirsten paralleled with her ‘store life’ at Kozminsky. The soundtrack of The Last Emperor  filled the atmosphere with serenity and riches, and above us slept a tawny frogmouth owl, oblivious to the goings on.

                                               

 I don’t feel like I’m very zen inside me, I feel like I’m not a zen person, I’m glad that I look that way sometimes.

We need to be hit in the face with a piece of two b' four to learn things, we don’t learn them easily we learn them because something happens that changes us and I think that that’s how my life has been, that I’ve learnt as I’ve grown. But I think probably because I did embark on a self discovery journey quite a few years ago through psychotherapy I was able to get a fairly good understanding of who I am, including all my neuroses.

I hadn’t done a lot of things I wanted to do when I first could have done them, so  I thought I really want to go back and do Psychology …the reason I did it was really because I was hit by a piece of two b’ four .. and I was off work for a year and did a lot of thinking in that time and realised that things that really matter to me were people [um], and that’s been interesting with working with jewellery because jewellery and people for me are inextricably linked and the relationship that I create with with people and jewellery are inextricably linked.. I don’t [sort of] see them as separate .. I feel like my integrity and truthfulness with my client whether it be phsyco-theroputic  clients or jewellery purchases is the same, it’s congruent, so I feel like I’ve got congruence. And, I feel like sometimes in life that’s one of the hard things to have, to be congruent in life between how you’d like people to see you and what’s actually going on inside you.



I thought about Kokeshi as I was sorting them and putting them out today, and I think that at some level the Kokeshis'  work for me as a response to what I would describe as not a really happy childhood. I think there’s a lot of girls in there that make up or things I feel I didn’t have as a child. I think I have had more of a childhood collecting those than I did as a child.

My father had a huge decorator in him, [so] when we were growing up we lived in Mentone which was just a little seaside town, and Dad made a ‘mini Europe' in the beachside town Mentone…. Other people were eating chops for breakfast or lunch and I was having sauerkraut and these things I couldn’t pronounce, and I was embarrassed by that. Very embarrassed that I wasn’t the normal girl.

My father believed there were three kinds of opportunity for his four children; Kozminsky, Kozminsky (and) Kozminsky and all of us were given the same three options… I’ve been absolutely adamant that none of my children join the business.

I worked in the business from the time I could barely poke my head over the counter, I must have been an absolutely precocious monster when I look back on it, but I think that training was good because I learnt a lot about what we called in those days “the trade”, we don’t call it the trade any more because it’s a business now… We’re not all designed to be lawyers and doctors, there’s a billion other things we can be and I think that a society that allows people to use their hands constructively and in beautiful ways is a society that’s actually quite sophisticated, and I don’t see Australia as necessarily very sophisticated, yet.


I think I associate a lot with my German Grandmother, and my German Grandmother during World War II made hats to keep my father and his sister alive… I really respected that drive in a woman and I feel that women are vastly underrated  in terms of capacity, strength, wisdom. The reason that it’s a mans world is that men could not afford for it to be a woman’s world, because women have so much capacity it’s scary.


I thought about Kokeshi as I was sorting them and putting them out today, and I think that at some level the Kokeshis'  work for me as a response to what I would describe as not a really happy childhood. I think there’s a lot of girls in there that make up or things I feel I didn’t have as a child. I think I have had more of a childhood collecting those than I did as a child.

And when I was moving my Kokeshi before I knew every Kokeshi.. so (the) only ones that I give away are ones that aren’t embroiled with some kind of spirit.
 

I love collage…I don’t know what it says about me but I love collage.

Kirsten Albrecht
kozminsky.com
Facebook/KozminskyMelbourne
Instagram Kozminsky

Contributing Visual Director
Virginia Dowzer
virginiadowzer@bigpond.com 
Tumblr- virginiadowzer
Instagram - Virginia Dowzer


VIRGINIA DOWZER

WALKABOUT. Melbourne, Victoria, Australia December 2014.


I am Virginia Dowzer and I am a stylist. 
I’ve dedicated my entire working lifetime to creatively exploring the potentials of visual communication, primarily in fashion but also working on projects, with fashion-related themes. 
It is crucial to me that my work has a sense of wonderment and interest because of its complexities and balance - I want it to tell a story.
I don’t think that you should ever underestimate how much you can feed the mind visually and what richness that can bring … 
Because most of all what I do and what I try to do is to create beauty. 
Extract from the biography of Virginia Dowzer


                                           




TIME WITH JOAN is really excited to welcome Contributing Visual Director Virginia Dowzer, whom spends much of her time in her car.. a moving observatory window on life and her choice location for TIME WITH JOAN. 

Virginia Dowzer and I have worked together for ten years on projects that maintain their longevity through the constant theme of 'beauty'. BEAUTY.. A combination of qualities, such as shape, colour, or form that pleases the aesthetic senses, especially the sight. [Oxford Dictionary]

In occupying the better part of a day touring Melbourne making stops for 'drop off's' and garment changes, there was a lot of laughter and wonderful insight into the full gamut of drivers behind Virginia's personal theories on interest, inspiration, passion and the wonderment of beauty.

It is the 'gamut' that makes Virginia's work so full and exciting. The layers of complexity built and born from nature and nurture give Virginia's creativity it's third dimension.

'Whenever we said we were bored, our mother said, "Well go MAD and tear paper".. and literally we did!.. stacks of newspaper and we would tear it all up and make cubby houses in the hallway with it.'




'I do feel very deeply about visual communication and how people communicate visually. Every day I see [you know] keep my eyes open for things, new things.. people on the street, people walking along, the way that they present themselves...it's inspiring...quite often it's the people that don't try very hard that are the most inspirational to me.'

'My mother was very strict, she was very English. She was very strict in terms of [um] what we were allowed to engage with when we were young.. so it was very much growing up in the 70's in a, I guess you would call it a "bohemian" environment really'.




'The most beautiful things that I have thought, that have taken my breath away are really in nature, it isn't really man made things at all. [And] I do think things are really beautiful that man has made, I can see the work that goes into them and things do take my breath away, but nature really takes my breath away.. it's unbelievable what happens in nature.. un-believable.'

'I have so many theories about different things, and usually my theories... usually they are right [and] but I observe lots of things that a lot of people don't and I guess that I do think a lot about those things.'

'I have a thing when I go to the ballet, that the ballerinas are all lined up and they move in unison and they are in exactly the same timing.. I will still burst into tears.. because to me it's such perfection, split second timing,  in order for that to happen it takes such huge amounts of work and so when I look at that and when that happens on stage, that's something that will make me incredibly emotional.. because I guess, of the back end of how you actually achieve that.'




'When I lay out my table I always [ah] make sure that it looks what I call "Haptic". When something is "Haptic" you want to touch it and it is so covetable that you almost have to put your hands on it.. I used to get angry when people put their hands on it but now I realise, actually it's something people can't help doing...'

 'I am genuinely interested in [I guess] the science of life.'



Virginia Dowzer 
virginiadowzer@bigpond.com
Tumblr- virginiadowzer 
Instagram - Virginia Dowzer

With thanks to
Adrian Lewis Jewellery 
Audi Australia 
Christine Accessories  
Cose Ipanema  
Kozminsky  
Mark Douglass Design 





Scanlan Theodore 
City of Melbourne 
 

PHILIP BOON and SONIA AUDINO

BLUE. Mary Lipshut's ML Vintage collection, Melbourne, Australia November 2014.



'Where we are sitting now is my friend Mary Lipshuts' showroom, I suppose where I met her a few years ago and I was asked to do an exhibition for her and we became firm and fast friends. I think she was in her early eighties at that time and I was, oh, I won't say.' Philip Boon[PB]

Fashion Stylist and Creative Director Philip Boon and Fashion Director Sonia Audino are long term friends who have a great passion for the fashion, art, design, architecture of the 1970's.

[The late] Mary Lipshut was a fashion Doyenne who through the repercussion of political decisions accumulated a divine collection of what is now 'unworn' vintage fashion. Philip Boon and Sonia Audino have inherited responsibility of the ML Vintage collection and through their love of vintage plan to take it to the world.

 [In Marys words] 'I had a fashion imports business and had exclusivity over the import of Courréges and Missoni in Australia. But in the early 1970's the French tested their first nuclear bombs in the Pacific, and Australia black-banned all french products for two years.
The fashion changed very quickly and two years later, by the time I could sell my shipment - a shipment that was meant to be for the whole of Australia - the fashion was too far behind!'
At the advice of famed Italian fashion journalist Anna Piaggi,  Lipshut held on to her massive collection of two year old Courréges.

'She had great foresight , in 1973 she said 'Pack it away, because all over the world museums are going to want to open fashion galleries and vintage fashion will come into it's own'.
Mary added to this initial collection over the following decades buying from some of the worlds most famed designers which lead her to open a vintage showroom in the late 1990's that became ML Vintage.

Sonia Audino [SA] 'I guess working with this collection a driver for me is actually being able to work with a piece of fashion history, and that's very exciting. And I think also, [I guess] being Australian and I [I guess] having my roots on Perth, you don't actually get to see something like this and I think probably 'globally'  you don't really get to see a collection like Mary's.' 






'We both have a love of Vintage.. it's the perfect partnership, both have a massive love of the 1970's, all things design. We have a very clear vision of where we'd like to see the collection, we're very very proud of it, to carry on Mary's legacy' [SA]






'I always loved vintage,  I wore vintage myself for many years. I used to back when I was a clothing designer just wear vintage suits [you know] nine 'til five all the time, and basically went on to really look into and research vintage and that's what lead me to Mary I suppose'. Philip Boon [PB]

In the foyer of the ML Vintage collection there is a breath taking collection of framed photographs and newspaper cuttings a 'fame wall' that encapsulates Mary Lipshuts unrivalled passion and life in fashion, her friends and accomplices. Messages and photographs from Gianni Versace, Anna Piaggi and Missoni - Rosita and Octavio. Frank Sinatra, Danni Minogue, Geoffrey Rush, to see this is fascinating to anyone.

The excitement that Philip and Sonia have for the ML Vintage collection is inspiring and infectious. To see two people surrounded by this particular treasure trove is akin to making a wish and it actually happening. To see vintage unworn from bathing suits to dresses and accessories was overwhelming.

'When I first met Sonia she was driving around in her Mum and Dads 1960's Mercedes - what    colour?' PB    
'It was Baby Blue' SA 
'Mmmm, blue, not pale blue' PB
'Baby Blue.. she was lovely' SA
Philip Boon & Sonia Audino
pbsavintage@gmail.com

Contributing Visual Director
Virginia Dowzer

virginiadowzer@bigpond.com 
Tumblr- virginiadowzer
Instagram - Virginia Dowzer

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