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Pink Boxy Fish and Chips hoodie

Pink Boxy Fish & Chips Hoodie (2022)
2022
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This tailored hoodie is part of a two piece ensemble with a pleated skirt from Thebe Magugu's 'Discard Theory' collection which was first presented at the V&A’s Autumn 2022 Fashion in Motion. This show featured 25 looks inspired by Dunusa, a well-known market in downtown Johannesburg filled with secondhand clothes discarded by Europe and America. Dunusa means 'bend over', describing the action of reaching down and rummaging through the piles and bins of clothes that gather there. From Dunusa Magugu brought back to his studio pieces such as sweatshirts, denim cargo pants, tracksuits, and ties and analysed and manipulated these silhouettes and styles in order to reinterpret them into ‘high’ fashion. Magugu describes ‘Discard Theory’ as a subversion of economist and sociologist Thorstein Veblen’s 1899 essay ‘The Theory of the Leisure Class’ which argues that waste and conspicuous consumption are two of the most critical signals of a country’s amassment of wealth and power and that fashion starts with those who are able to consume in large quantities and then makes its ways down to the lower classes. Magugu’s 2022 collection, instead, proposes the idea of ‘trickle-up fashion’, an inversion of the ‘trickle-down’ economic theory by pushing what has been deemed as waste, back up into the luxury space. Magugu created a documentary film about the collection, shot in Dunusa, throughout Johannesburg, and in his studio. During the film Magugu is shown purchasing fish and chips from a vendor at the Dunusa market which inspired the print on this garment. Magugu explains in the film that people in Johannesburg regularly purchase clothes from Dunusa and reappropriate and recontextualize them to create their own unique and cross-cultural styles of dress, a practice which the collection is also an homage to. The documentary concludes in Dunusa with hands finding a t-shirt with Thebe Magugu’s logo within the piles of discarded clothes and unfolding it to reveal it to the camera as if to suggest that this is eventually what will happen to all high fashion, including Maugu’s own work, given the wasteful nature and cycles of conspicuous consumption.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitlePink Boxy Fish and Chips hoodie (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Cotton, print
Brief description
Pink Hoodie with Overprint Koi Fish & Sweet Potato Chips, designed by Thebe Magugu, Johannesburg, South Africa, 'Discard Theory' Autumn 2022
Physical description
Pink Hoodie with print of Koi Fish & Sweet Potato Chips, tailored waist and pocket pouch. Designed by Thebe Magugu, Johannesburg, South Africa, 'Discard Theory' collection, 2022
Summary
This tailored hoodie is part of a two piece ensemble with a pleated skirt from Thebe Magugu's 'Discard Theory' collection which was first presented at the V&A’s Autumn 2022 Fashion in Motion. This show featured 25 looks inspired by Dunusa, a well-known market in downtown Johannesburg filled with secondhand clothes discarded by Europe and America. Dunusa means 'bend over', describing the action of reaching down and rummaging through the piles and bins of clothes that gather there. From Dunusa Magugu brought back to his studio pieces such as sweatshirts, denim cargo pants, tracksuits, and ties and analysed and manipulated these silhouettes and styles in order to reinterpret them into ‘high’ fashion. Magugu describes ‘Discard Theory’ as a subversion of economist and sociologist Thorstein Veblen’s 1899 essay ‘The Theory of the Leisure Class’ which argues that waste and conspicuous consumption are two of the most critical signals of a country’s amassment of wealth and power and that fashion starts with those who are able to consume in large quantities and then makes its ways down to the lower classes. Magugu’s 2022 collection, instead, proposes the idea of ‘trickle-up fashion’, an inversion of the ‘trickle-down’ economic theory by pushing what has been deemed as waste, back up into the luxury space. Magugu created a documentary film about the collection, shot in Dunusa, throughout Johannesburg, and in his studio. During the film Magugu is shown purchasing fish and chips from a vendor at the Dunusa market which inspired the print on this garment. Magugu explains in the film that people in Johannesburg regularly purchase clothes from Dunusa and reappropriate and recontextualize them to create their own unique and cross-cultural styles of dress, a practice which the collection is also an homage to. The documentary concludes in Dunusa with hands finding a t-shirt with Thebe Magugu’s logo within the piles of discarded clothes and unfolding it to reveal it to the camera as if to suggest that this is eventually what will happen to all high fashion, including Maugu’s own work, given the wasteful nature and cycles of conspicuous consumption.
Collection
Accession number
T.31:1-2024

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Record createdJuly 3, 2023
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