The Encyclopedia of Deconstruction
Antwerp Six. The Crows. Virgil Abloh. A comprehensive overview of the influential artistic philosophy.
One fateful day in 1989, lauded fashion photographer Bill Cunningham changed the way we speak about exposed seams forever. “Deconstructivist” was the term he used to describe Martin Margiela’s FW89 collection in Details Magazine, after which the word became a fixture in fashion discourse. The concept, which ranges from distressing to disheveling to a process-revealing approach to design, finds its roots in mid-century continental philosophy and was first popularized by Jacques Derrida.
From there, it made its way into the world of architecture, graphic design and contemporary art. When it reached fashion, deconstruction offered a riposte to the polished, prim and office-appropriate aesthetics that had ruled the runways of the early ’80s. Fronted by a guerilla group from Antwerp, Belgium, the movement forced fashion to reckon with time-honored traditions and established ways of working.
Of course, the story of deconstruction—now omnipresent from everyday ripped jeans to asymmetrical formal dresses—is one of many chapters in the long history of fashion. Below, an extensive overview of the movement’s key figures, moments and storylines, arranged in alphabetical order.