Access All Areas April 2020 | Page 30

APRIL | COVER FEATURE Access has been lucky enough... to attend two of designer Richard Quinn’s fashion shows, the latest being his London Fashion Week SS20 event at Royal Horticultural Halls’ Lawrence Hall, which became known as the ‘House of Quinn’ in testament to its overhaul in a vision led by the South East Londoner, production company Family Ltd, and his creative team’s genius. The ascent of Quinn’s career led to a palpable tension in the vast 1,600sqm hall as stylishly clad buyers and fashionistas awaited their up-close- and-personal glimpse at Quinn’s SS20 range. The spectacle did not disappoint. Guests were treated to a parade that embraced beauty and darkness in equal measure. The models’ perfectly clipped attire embraced Quinn’s now famous bent for floral flourishes, juxtaposed with his macabre taste for dark, anarchic aesthetics. Sequined, spiked, studded and feathered masked figures strutted past transfixed onlookers as kinky leather ensembles were contrasted with more playful houndstooth garments and larger than life bubble skirts. So effectively marrying tonal contrasts is part of the secret to Quinn’s much deserved hype, but the audiovisuals, the cavernous venue, the flower-lined decoration, the timing and the sense of theatre that make up the event is as much down to Quinn as the fashion. “The clothes wouldn’t make sense without the theatre,” Quinn told Access backstage after the event. “The clothes wouldn’t make sense with just a traditional up and down runway and a 30 blank space venue. We are creating something that is a 360 degree representation, and that only happens through a curated event space,” he adds as a flurry of creatives and media types busied themselves with the numerous tasks that such an undertaking necessitates. Quinn is keen to draw attention to the collaborative process that goes into achieving his life’s work, for which he has the active input of his family members. “We work with set designer Derek Martin, who’s amazing. And my brother and my sister are now on board doing lots of production, so it’s a family affair.” Quinn adds: “My desk is my design team’s desk, so it’s more a case of coming up with ideas collaboratively. The conversations are collaborative, like ‘wouldn’t it be amazing if we did a 'pearly kings and queens’ theme, and then there follows a discussion about how we should make them into 'dolls’. "We get inspired by new ideas each season, but we also gain a better sense of what we can achieve with event production and who can do what to achieve our vision. Once you’ve done a few rodeos you get a better idea of what’s possible.” Quinn remains something of an outsider in the fashion world, appearing in unassuming attire at his events. When Access met the designer, he was passionate, but affable, wearing a baseball cap, a casual jacket and jeans, a look similar to the attire he wore when he met our reigning monarch to receive the inaugural Queen Elizabeth II Award for British Design, a royal stamp of approval the Peckham-based designer found out he was receiving just weeks before his Autumn/Winter 2018 show. Did meeting the Queen change him? “I think I’m pretty much the same,” he tells Access, with a smile. Quinn drew much of his inspiration from "The clothes wouldn’t make sense without the theatre"