Gosha Rubchinskiy

Georgiy Aleksandrovich Rubchinskiy (Russian: Георгий Александрович Рубчинский; born 29 June 1984), known as Gosha Rubchinskiy (Russian: Гоша Рубчинский), is a Russian fashion designer and photographer and the founder of his eponymous brand (ГОША РУБЧИНСКИЙ).[1] Rubchinskiy takes inspiration from the fall of the Iron Curtain, Russian street and youth culture, and his experiences to create his collections, pushing Russian iconography, both past and present, onto the world stage through his runway shows and his imagery.

Gosha Rubchinskiy
Born (1984-06-29) 29 June 1984
Other namesГоша Рубчинский
EducationMoscow College of Technology and Design
Label(s)
GOSHA RUBCHINSKIY (ГОША РУБЧИНСКИЙ)

Early life

Rubchinskiy was born in Moscow in 1984, and later attended the Moscow College of Technology and Design.[2] Rubchinskiy wanted to work in fashion at a young age, and in college began hairdressing and makeup, which put him in the fashion circles of Russia.[3]

Brand

Referencing Ronald Reagan's Cold War-description of the USSR, Rubchinskiy's first collection, Empire of Evil was presented at the end of 2008 for SS/09. His second collection, Growing and Expanding, was shown in a disused Orthodox church-turned-gym in Moscow’s suburbs. Rubchinskiy's third collection, The sunrise is not far behind the mountains, consisted of three parts: a video shot in St. Petersburg, a book of photographs and the collection itself. In 2010, the designer presented his forth collection, Slave, as a part of Fashion East Menswear Installation. Rubchinskiy has been working with Comme des Garçons since 2012.[4]

In the summer of 2011, Gosha launched the project Transfiguration in a gallery space attached to a photography workshop and skate-park on the island of New Holland in Saint Petersburg, Russia - area that had been closed to the public for the previous three-hundred years.[5] The Transfiguration book, made with the help of publisher Junsuke Yamasaki and art director Pavel Milkyakov was published in 2012.[6] It was followed by the film two years later that epitomised his brand identity: strong young men with vulnerable expressions wearing a uniform derived from 80s punk music and 90s skate culture. Making reference to Russia's orthodox past through glimpses of religious paintings, and a soundtrack ranging from Igor Stravinsky's Firebird suite to t.A.T.u., the film illuminates a country undergoing political, economic and cultural turmoil whilst proving that its maker belongs to a post-Soviet generation bent on creative change.[7]

In August 2014, IDEA Books published Crimea/Kids, an 80-page photozine that explored Rubchinskiy's fascination with Russia's rebellious youth and their outlets through smoking, skateboarding and graffiti. For the next book Youth Hotel Rubchinskiy re-visits the Soviet themes he pursued in his recent 1984 collection, where he drew parallels between George Orwell's fictional totalitarian surveillance society and that of his homeland today. [8]

For his SS17 show staged at Pitti Uomo, Gosha Rubchinskiy presented a collection in three parts – a runway show, a film, and a series of photos, both entitled The Day of My Death, exhibited at the fair and later published as a book by IDEA. Florence's Manifattura Tabacchi provided the backdrop for them all; an abandoned factory built in the 1930s by the State's Fascist regime, which bears a striking resemblance to Soviet architecture.[9] In this show Rubchinskiy also partnered with the Italian sportswear brand Fila, with FILA x Gosha Rubchinskiy showing sweatshirts featuring the brand and custom sneakers with Cyrillic script[10].

In 2016, the creative multi-hyphenate released a fragrance, along with a new photography book to accompany it - titled Perfume Book – which featured one of Rubchinskiy's shaven-headed muses shot in Spain.[11] The same year Gosha launched new label PACCBET, together with Tolia Titaev, a professional skater and muse to the designer. The name, which has already appeared as a slogan in some of Rubchinskiy's designs, is also a symbol of the new emerging generation of Russian skaters.[12]

Following the announcement of Gosha Rubchisnkiy's long-term collaboration with adidas Football leading up to the 2018 World Cup, the designer chose the city of Kaliningrad for his first show in Russia since 2009.[13] The football-inspired A/W 17 collection was presented at the Regional Center of Youth Culture, which currently occupies the building of the Königsberg Stock Exchange. His open casting call was answered by young men from all over the country. A documentary Apart, presented by a Moscow-based publishing and online platform INRUSSIA, stars three young men who travelled from across Russia to take a part in the show in the country's westernmost exclave.[14] Directed by Papaya Dog, the film is a poetic and beautiful testament to the lives of Gosha's post-Soviet youth, told without hyperbole or drama. Kaliningrad guidebook and travel zine, featuring enigmatic, black-and-white photography by Kirill Gluschenko, shines light on the unique historical convergence of German and Soviet architecture of the city and aims to guide visitors through Kaliningrad in a friendly fashion. The zine was presented at the show in January 2017 and launched Gosha's collaboration with INRUSSIA's publishing program.[15]

During the presentation of his 2018 S/S collection in St. Petersburg, Gosha Rubchinskiy revealed his collaboration with Burberry.[16] The collection, inspired by football and Russian rave aesthetics, is essentially a love letter to that ’90s scene. It was followed by the release of a limited-run zine [17] offering an intimate look into the underground cultural revolution birthed from the ashes of Soviet Russia in the late ’80s and early ’90s. Giving more context to the collection and its inspiration, Saint Petersburg zine serves as a contextual guide through Russia’s underground rave culture, featuring photos captured in such iconic night clubs as Tunnel and Planetarium, as well as exclusive interviews with the movement’s key figures.[18]

In February 2017, the Rubchinskiy-backed brand and skate team PACCBET traveled to Southern California to meet with American skaters Dolan Stearn, Julian Klincewicz, and their crew. During the road trip, they effortlessly collided their respective worlds into a short documentary, weaving through California’s concrete and rubble surface.[19] The film was presented along with the second collection by РАССВЕТ at the Trading Museum in Paris in June 2017. A zine titled “Goodbye America” and the brand's lookbook completed the three-part project.[20]

In April 2018, Rubchinskiy announced on Instagram that the self titled brand would be ending "as you've known it."[21] He stated that the brand would no longer create seasonal collections and that "something new" was coming.[22] In a talk translated by Vogue Rubchinskiy commented, "Every idea has a time and what I wanted to express, I expressed it. I believe that in the state that [Gosha Rubchinskiy] exists, it is a good condition to end this history and start a new one." [23] There has yet to be news as to how the brand will change, while some believe Rubchinskiy will use this freedom to work on independent projects within the brand such as his photography, which the designer already integrated into the brand.

Influence

The success of Rubchinsky and Demna Gvasalia of Vetements brought huge attention to so-called "Post-Soviet" aesthetics.[24] The trend wasn't limited to major chain stores such as Urban Outfitters and Topman that started selling garment with Cyrillic slogans, but also led to a renaissance in clothing design in Russia and Ukraine.[25] The list of brands that contributed to the Post-Soviet streetwear trend included Sputnik 1985, Volchok, Mech, LECHARLATAN, R-SSA, Podmost, Syndicate, Otocyon, Artem Shumov, Anastasia Dokuchaeva, Yasya Minochkina, Turbo Yulia, Alexandr Rogov and many others.[26][27][28][29]

Controversies

In December 2018, it was alleged by a 16-year-old boy that Rubchinskiy pressured him into sending explicit photographs of himself.[30] The boy included screenshots as evidence.[31] Shortly thereafter, another man claimed that Rubchinskiy also requested explicit photographs.[30] Rubchinskiy denied the accusations.[30]

See also

References

  1. "Culture Now: Gosha Rubchinskiy". www.ica.org.uk. Archived from the original on 16 February 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  2. "Gosha Rubchinskiy: Breaking News, Latest Collections and Brand History". Highsnobiety. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  3. "Gosha Rubchinskiy: Inside his Vertically Integrated Youth Universe - 032c Workshop". 032c Workshop. 15 June 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  4. "Meet Russian fashion superstar Gosha Rubchinskiy". adelefansite.com. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  5. "Gosha Rubchinskiy's TRANSFIGURATION". Dazed.
  6. "Transfiguration Book by Gosha Rubchinskiy".
  7. "Exclusive: Gosha Rubchinskiy's Crimea/Kids". AnOther.
  8. "Peep Gosha Rubchinskiy's new photo book ahead of its release". Dazed.
  9. "Gosha Rubchinskiy reveals new photo book and film". Dazed.
  10. Nast, Condé. "FILA Sneakers Just Became Cool Again". GQ. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  11. "Exclusive: Gosha Rubchinskiy discusses new perfume and book". Dazed.
  12. "PACCBET: Russian designer Gosha Rubchinskiy to launch new skate label". Calvert Journal.
  13. "Gosha Rubchinskiy's Russian Men's Wear Show". New York Times Style.
  14. "Apart". INRUSSIA.
  15. "TAKE A HISTORICALLY RICH TRIP THROUGH KALININGRAD". INRUSSIA.
  16. "New Images From Gosha Rubchinskiy's Magazine Explore Russia's Rave Culture in the '90s". HypeBeast.
  17. "Rediscover Russian Rave". INRUSSIA.
  18. "THE RISE OF THE ST. PETERSBURG RAVE". INRUSSIA.
  19. "SKATEBOARDING IS NOT A DREAM". INRUSSIA.
  20. "This Means DAWN: PACCBET Skate Film in Los Angeles". 032c.
  21. "Gosha Rubchinskiy Is Stopping His Brand "As You've Known It"". HYPEBEAST. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  22. Nast, Condé. "Gosha Rubchinskiy as You Know It Is Gone". GQ. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  23. Nast, Condé. "Gosha Rubchinskiy on the End of Gosha Rubchinskiy—And More From His Talk in Tbilisi, Georgia". Vogue. Retrieved 20 November 2019.
  24. Alec Leach (13 February 2017). "What Do Russian Fashion Insiders Think of the Post-Soviet Trend?". Highsnobiety. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  25. Theo Merz (10 December 2017). "Get the 'post-Soviet' look: how Russian street style went global". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  26. "The Current Nexus of Skateboarding Fashion — From Russia with Love". District. 31 May 2017. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  27. Sasha Raspopina (23 June 2016). "Spelling it out: why Cyrillic slogan streetwear is the new punk uniform for post-Soviet teens". The Calvert Journal. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  28. Rae Witte (27 March 2018). "5 young russian designers who aren't gosha". i-D. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  29. Caroline Mas (14 November 2017). "5 designers russes à surveiller de près". L'Officiel. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  30. Wolf, Cam (11 December 2018). "Gosha Rubchinskiy's Allegedly Inappropriate Casting Spotlights the Fashion Industry's Messy Morals". GQ. Retrieved 17 August 2019.
  31. "Diet Prada ™ on Instagram: "As 2018 draws to a close, designers seem to be casting their bid for consideration in the Nastiest Human of the Year category. Up next is..."". Instagram. 8 December 2018. Retrieved 17 August 2019.
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