WAR sTOrY by Natasha English and Tatyanna Meharry, of Christchurch. Winners of the Supreme WOW award and of the Aotearoa section. Photo / Stephen A'Court
Christchurch sisters Natasha English and Tatyanna Meharry have made history by becoming the first two-time winners of the Supreme Award at the World of Wearable Arts.
The sisters, who began entering WOW in 2012, created their 2018 entry, WAR sTOrY, as a representation of the more than 120,000 New Zealand men and women who served in World War I. They began planning the garment in 2014, a year after winning their first Supreme WOW Award, and say the goal was to get on stage in 2018 to mark the centenary of the end of WWI.
The piece incorporates recycled objects including old army and household blankets, salvaged rimu from demolished houses, plastic toy soldiers, crushed red bricks and traded pieces of pounamu to create the garment.
"We wanted to include as many tangible memories as well, using recycled materials that have been either collected over the years, traded or salvaged to help imbue this art piece with memories for past, current and future generations," English says, adding that the weight of the memories and stories of the past pave the way for future generations of mokopuna to carry.
WOW founder and head judge Dame Suzie Moncrieff described WAR sTOrY as a garment that demonstrated an exceptional example of powerful storytelling realised through a work of art and flawless in its execution.
Along with two Supreme WOW Awards, the sisters have picked up four other awards including, in 2016, runner-up to the Supreme Award.
They were among designers from eight countries who were last night named as award winners at WOW's 30th anniversary show, which features 140 garments by 147 designers from 17 countries and regions.
Since its launch in 1987, WOW has grown to become the world's leading wearable art design competition with a stage show that attracts up to 60,000 people. This year, a record 17 countries and regions were represented across six categories or worlds: Avant-garde, Aotearoa and Open Sections, Under the Microscope, Reflective Surfaces and the biennial Bizarre Bra. There are also regional prizes and awards for first-time and student entrants.
Along with Dame Suzie, the 2018 judges were Margarita Robertson, creative director of fashion label NOM*d; Sam Gao, Weta Workshop art director and business development manager, Weta Workshop co-founder and CEO Sir Richard Taylor; Cirque du Soleil's Nathalie Bouchard and International Guest judge Mary Wing To.
WOW is on at the TSB Arena, Wellington until Sunday, October 14
WOW winners:
WAR sTOrY by Natasha English and Tatyanna Meharry (Christchurch, New Zealand) Winner: Supreme WOW Award Winner: Aotearoa Section Ernst Haeckel's Bride by Nika Danielska (Wroclaw, Poland) Runner Up: Supreme WOW Award Winner: Under the Microscope Section
Mind the Synaptic Gap by Grace DuVal (Chicago, United States) Winner: Dame Suzie Moncrieff Award Feminine Hell by Xia Tian, Yang Mengtong & He Fangyu (Shanghai, China) Runner Up: Dame Suzie Moncrieff Award
Foreign Bodies by Dawn Mostow and Ben Gould (Seattle, United States) Winner: International Award: Americas Design Award Winner: International Design Award
Underling by Gillian Saunders (Nelson, New Zealand) Winner: Open Section
Uplifting by David Kirkpatrick (Waikato, New Zealand) Winner: Bizarre Bra Section Echoplex — Goddess of Reverb by Natalie Hutton (Melbourne, Australia) Winner: Avant-garde Section
The Wise Athena by Lau Siu San & Cathy, Sin Wei Chow (Hong Kong, China) Winner: Reflective Surfaces Section Winner: International Award: Asia Design Award
Eye See you Fluffy Kōwhai by Tina Hutchison-Thomas (Christchurch, New Zealand) Winner: New Zealand Design Award
Absinthium by R.R. Pascoe (Blue Mountains, Australia) Winner: International Award: Australia and Pacific Design Award