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review of mickey de balzac at fiac art fair

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    ALL EARS Manifestations of the art and style worlds current fascination with all things Disney include, from top, Mickey de Balzac and Mondrian Mickey by artist Darren Lago, Givenchys Bambi sweatshirt, a Lanvin-clad Minnie Mouse, a Mickey top by Marc Jacobs, Paul & Joe Sisters Bambi tee, a Mickey-sketch top by Comme des Garons, Colettes blue-Bambi tee, LOVE magazines Minnie Mouse covers, fashion editor Anna Dello Russo in mouse ears during Paris Fashion Week, the upcoming Disney film Saving Mr. Banks and Jeremy Scotts Mickey glasses for Linda Farrow. MINNIE MOUSE, EPA/ETIENNE LAURENT; GIVENCHY AND MARC JACOBS, IMA XTREE; ANNA DELLO RUSSO, BERTRAND RINDOFF PETROFF/GETT Y IMAGES

    or a special presentation during the spring/summer 2013 shows in London last fall, designers includ-ing Giles Deacon, Michael van der Ham and Richard Nicoll looked to an unusual muse Minnie

    Mouse as inspiration for one-off dresses and accessories that were later auctioned off to support a fashion arts foundation. During Paris Fashion Week this October, editor Anna Dello Russo got in on the game, hopping from show to show wearing a giant mouse-ear hat. And at Colette, the hip French concept store, Bambi has been reshaded deep blue to adorn the front of a T-shirt; it joins fashion brands both high (Givenchy, Comme des Garons) and mass-market (Forever 21) in the appro-priation of Disney characters as motifs over the past several months.

    What the Donald Duck is going on? Have the people behind the Happiest Place on Earth adopted an expansionist policy? After years of dominating the kiddie sector through theme parks, branded toys and animated fi lms, Disney appears to want to add some dimension to its image, an effort that includes sanctioning a warts-and-all look at its hallowed founder. In the upcoming movie Saving Mr. Banks, which chronicles Walt Disneys attempts to secure the screen rights to the Mary Poppins books from crotchety author P.L. Travers (Emma Thompson), Disney is portrayed by Tom Hanks not as the avuncular fi gurehead of common lore, but as a chain-smoking, Scotch-swilling tycoon who uses every trick in the book to win Travers over. The script, written by Kelly Marcel and Sue Smith, was reportedly untouched by Disney, which not only didnt object to the demythologization, but also produced the fi lm.

    In the fashion world, the Disneyfi cation process gathered steam last spring, when Mickey and Minnie Mouse made cameo appearances in Marc Jacobss and Meadham Kirchhoffs collections, the former presenting them in a polished way and the latter in a frilly and characteristically subversive one. As part of the festivities marking the 20th anniversary of Disneyland Paris, Lanvin creative director Alber Elbaz also dolled Minnie up in a sparkly royal-blue frock in place of her usual polka dots. Its the fi rst time an actual designer has come into the picture and designed a dress for her, he said after her makeover in March.

    It speaks to everyone, says Colettes Sarah Andelman, who is carrying Givenchys Bambi sweatshirts as well as her own stores homage, of Disneys mystique, which involves both nostalgia and kitsch. The

    sentiment is borne out by the popularity of the Comme des Garons SHIRT line, which features crisp button-downs bearing archival Mickey sketches.

    Another series of limited-edition tees featuring the cartoon rodents head have

    already sold out in the U.S.Last month, Colette also mounted an

    exhibition of James Francos art in its gallery space. Called The Animals, the show included a 32-page zine littered with stickers and

    drawings of Disney characters overtop the polymathic movie stars provoca-

    tive photography. Francos vision of them as unhinged residents of a

    universe that also included ape-headed women in bikinis was altogether different from the one expressed by stylist and fashion journalist Katie Grand in the recent fi fth-anniversary

    edition of Britains LOVE magazine, which featured Minnie Mouse on one of six polka-dotted cover versions. The other fi ve were graced by various models du jour wearing high-fashion mouse ears custom-designed by Miu Miu, Gucci, Jake and Dinos Chapman for Louis Vuitton, Marc by Marc Jacobs and Loewe.

    She has been one of the most instantly recognizable fi gures in Western culture for 80 years, one whose image has been repeated and referenced probably more than any other, Grand wrote of Minnie in what she dubbed the Sweetie Issue. But lets not forget that her full name is Minerva, the Roman goddess of art, commerce and wisdom. And here everyone thought she was just a pretty mouse.

    According to Stephen Teglas, vice-presi-dent of licensing at Disney Consumer Products, most of the Disney-themed fashion tributes out there right now have more than just the companys blessing. His creative team, he says via e-mail, is involved through-out the development processes, from ensuring that the right product idea [is] paired with the right character to sharing sketches and artwork along the way.

    Asked if the collaborations help re-engage people with Disney, Teglas says: I think [fans of Disney] continue to stay engaged throughout their lives. The characters are a symbol of childhood, innocence and fantasy, which is a great resource for fashion designers and artists.

    Of course, not all appropriations have been well received. Last Christmas, Barneys New York controversially morphed Minnie and her Disney pals into svelte, leggy versions of their former selves, presumably so they could fi t into animated versions of Lanvin, Balenciaga, Balmain and Rick Owens designs. It is also safe to assume that Francos work and that of Paul McCarthy (whose show last summer at the Park Avenue Armory in New York included a ribald, sexually explicit take on Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs) doesnt play well at Disney headquarters in Burbank, Calif., although artistic (re)interpretations are harder to stymie than purely commercial ventures.

    On that score, Dot Tuer, a writer and curator who teaches at OCAD University in Toronto, likens Mickey and his gang to other free-fl oating icons such as Che Guevara, the star of many a T-shirt and college-dorm poster. And indeed, one persons nostalgic hero is anothers political vehicle (see Ariel Dorfman and Armand Mattelarts How to Read Donald Duck: Imperialist Ideology in the Disney Comic, from 1975).

    For artist Darren Lago, whose Mickey de Balzac and Mondrian Mickey both sold at the recent Fiac contemporary-art fair in Paris, Mickey Mouse is the essence of modern pop culture, a potent aesthetic symbol that Roy Lichtenstein also enlisted when he painted Look Mickey back in 1961. According to Lago, who is based in London, Disney executives have increasingly understood this, balancing their role as guardians of the companys legacy with a tolerance of legitimate outside interpretations. They want Mickey to be associated, the artist says, with the highest form of visual language.

    Does a Forever 21 tee count as such? Not really, but it does illustrate the Walt Disney Companys maturity (and sense of fun) and the enduring appeal of its characters across international borders and among a wide range of consumers. On those fronts and globalization notwithstanding, it is a small world after all.

    High-priced Bambi sweatshirts. A designer makeover for Minnie Mouse. New (and edgy) artistic interpretations of

    the Disney canon. Despite founder Walts tight control of his empires image and output, his successors are showing an increasing willingness, Amy Verner reports from France

    (where Disneyland Paris turned 20 this year), to have fun with the brand and to extend its reach beyond the theme park

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