'Performing Marchesa II: A Stitch in the Timing'

'Performing Marchesa II: A Stitch in the Timing'
01:07 Dec 19, 2021
'Marchesa Fashion show footage used under Creative Commons: Attribution, Non-Commercial license. Music by Wayne DeFehr  A fashion show is really interesting, not least because as an art form it hasn\'t evolved much over the centuries. By contrast, circus tents are now arenas showcasing the amazing spectacles of Cirque du Soleil. The talkies have become mind-boggling block busters. But fashion shows have defied the trends and remained pretty much the same.  -- went to the fashion show the other day  -- oh yeah . . . how was it . . .  -- good . . . lots of walking  -- really! i love walking . . . what kind of walking was it? fast? slow?  -- slow walking . . . single file . . . loved the 5th model. Really knew what she was doing . . . good stride, right left right left . . . posture . . . amazing  (and so on . . .)  I don\'t necessarily care that much, personally, but fashion shows are on the TV sometimes, and they got me thinking. Could there be a way to evolve the art form that is the fashion show, besides the obvious idea of disrobing. Paris . . . New York . . . Edmonton Fashion Week . . . Maybe something could be done.  Then the idea arrived from nowhere, and to be honest I suppose it could return there as well. But I would just like to share . . . An evolution to the fashion show would be . . . synchronized walking, like a clockwork. Look at swimming . . . Synchronized movement was being performed in swimming pools so often that it became an Olympic sport. And fashion shows in the Synchro Walk Style could be one step closer to getting the models to stop this regimented marching business and start dancing instead. Hey, they could say, how is this outfit now?' 

Tags: fashion , ENTERTAINMENT , style , fashion show , Dresses , walking , arts , Performing , marchesa , Harpsichord

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