The Closet of the Anthropocene, an EFWA gallery exhibition of 29 sustainable fashion garments by local and international designers, opened at the Ellenbrook Art Gallery.
EFWA is more than a sustainable fashion runway show; it also includes gallery exhibitions and seminars that educate the public on the ever-increasing fashion waste and its effects on the environment and society.
Above photo: Sylvia Calvo, Barcelona, Spain
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Green Embassy’s Ghost Glacier collection opens EFWA Busselton
Australians, on average, purchase 56 new garments a year, double the global average, according to the Australia Institute. Today, Australians are the biggest clothing consumers, creating a 300,000-ton-mountain problem of textile waste.
Dr. Zuhal Kuvan-Mills curated the Closet of the Anthropocene to celebrate their community’s creativity by re-imagining existing garments and saving them from landfills.
On opening night, invited guests at the Ellenbrook Art Gallery were treated to a private fashion show featuring over 50 models representing local and international designers participating in EFWA in Busselton and Perth.
Several of the fashions displayed were outstanding: Ghost Glacier, a beautiful blue floor-length dress by Dr. Zuhal Kuvan-Mills that symbolized the melting glaciers.
Sylvia Calvo’s outfit is constructed from hand-painted silk by Anna Albert, and discarded jute coffee bags were eye-catching.
Remarkable was the R3 Warrior Women garment, crafted by Uganda-born, British-based eco-stainable designer Jose Hendo, which was constructed from Barkcloth, an organic-bio-degradable cloth manufactured with no added chemicals or textile agents.
The Closet of the Anthropocene brings to light one of today’s most significant global waste issues and should not be missed.
EFWA is working to build awareness and find workable solutions to save our planet.
For exhibition hours, visit Ellenbrook Art Gallery.