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Angelo Seminara’s Stolen Vase – a story of rare hands

Schermata 2018-03-13 alle 18.54.35.png

Sala Umberto, Rome, late 90’s. Angelo Seminara is rehearsing one of his first hairshows. Since the 20’s the theatre has been the temple of vaudeville in Rome; even Totò performed here. An object used as a simple prop grabs Angelo’s attention: a ceramic vase, with a gently rounded shape, recalling a classic handmade Murano glass. The vase is covered with an overlay of an extra-fine woven texture, in a natural color. Angelo grabs it. He can feel the soft, regular rhythm of the thin straw threads under his fingertips. It’s like touching those traditional rush-covered straw mats, originally used in Japan as seating for aristocrats, samurai and priests.

He closes his eyes. What if this superb, ancient, noble craft could be infused into hairdressing? On the flight back, the vase, safely wrapped, nestles in Angelo’s luggage. More than a keepsafe of the Roman trip, it’s a memory trigger for the future. Memento! used to say Latins, meaning a phrase or a monument intended as an exhortation to remember. The vase finds a prominent place in Angelo’s London studio, providing a constant warning not to forget the stunning beauty that patient, skillful, time-oblivious hands can create.

In the following years, while developing his research on the use of hair as a raw material for experimental handicraft, Angelo cannot stop wondering if he will ever be able to bring that level of tiny detail to hair.

Finally, after a nearly 20-year interlude, Angelo comes up with a new technique called Tatami; a technique that brings hairdressing one step forward, by achieving an unbelievable subtlety of texture, something nearly impossible to create manually.

Now that his persistent efforts have resulted in an astonishing outcome, Angelo is planning a visit to Rome to replace the stolen vase, full of gratitude for an object, that has allowed him to take a long and fruitful journey through the many possibilities of hairdressing.

Watch the video

Since nearly 20 years, Angelo Seminara is carrying on a special research on the use of hair as a raw material for experimental handicraft. In particular, he has been looking for a way to infuse into hairdressing the superb, ancient and noble craft of Tatami, the traditional rush-covered straw mats, originally used in Japan as seating for aristocrats, samurai and priests.

Finally in 2018, Angelo comes up with a new technique, called Tatami, that brings hairdressing one step forward, by achieving an unbelievable subtlety of texture, nearly impossible to create manually.

This technique, which brings the tiny detail of straw weave to hair, is even more: it’s Angelo’s latest independent fashion collection, where the rigorous order of woven hair is masterfully counterbalanced by texturized loose hair in big volumes. Like a modern day Frida Kahlo or a contemporary geisha, the woman pictured in the collection is free, self-confident and inventive. Her make up is daring, her clothes sophisticated and boldly combined.

The transgressive side of the project is powerfully aroused by the tense atmosphere of the video clip, where a mysterious museum exhibits heads of hair instead of works of art.

 

tags: Angelo Seminara, british hairdresser of the year, tatami, Alessandro Molinari, Elisa Barbieri, Personal Storytelling
categories: Personal Storytelling
Tuesday 03.13.18
Posted by 00:am
 

Davines WWHT 2016 L.A. Report

Davines proposed the best of international coiffure with an extraordinary hairshow at the historic Orpheum Theatre located in downtown L.A., where over 2,000 attendants showed up to the two-day (January 18-19, 2016) annual event – World Wide Hair Tour. The fusion of videoart, music, dance and light breathed life into the creations of Davines’ most renowned hairstylists in the world. 

00:am has been working for months on the Show Artistic Direction: video&graphic backgrounds, video-stories, soundtracks, storytelling, choice of the theme, creative maps and new formats, like the World Style Contest’s competition one.

The number one star of the show was of course the hair genius Angelo Seminara, Davines Artistic Director since 2011, who performed in two amazing shows –Monday & Tuesday– that simply mesmerized his audience. Angelo took this opportunity in the spotlight to present Davines’ new line Your Hair Assistant, conceived and designed by himself.

Among the talent that was gracing Orpheum Theatre was legendary cinema hairdresser Aldo Signoretti, amazing Canadian hairstylist Anna Pacitto, Danish dynamic duo Brian & Kirsten, the sublime team of ION Studio NYC, the extraordinary Anthony Polsinelli, UK London's education gurus Allilon Education Team led by Johnny Othona and Pedro Inchenko, and the Davines North America Artistic Team made by Francesco Ferri, James Abu Ulba, Lina Shamoun and Naomi Knights. 

Davide Bollati, the Owner/Chairman of Davines, shared with the audience I Sustain Beauty, a callout for everybody to participate in making the world a more beautiful place and the Davines Village, the architecture project for the company’s new headquarters in Parma designed by Matteo Thun.

Davines CEO, Paolo Braguzzi, explained to the audience what B.Corps are - companies who use business to do something good for the world - and proclaimed the company’s intention to join the global B.Corps Movement in the next few months.

tags: Davines, World Wide Hair Tour, Angelo Seminara, Aldo Signoretti, I Sustain Beauty, B Corporation, Allilon Education, Hairshow, Events
Sunday 01.24.16
Posted by 00:am
 

Hair Show Storytelling - DAVINES WWHT 2016 LOS ANGELES

Quello dei parrucchieri è un mondo a sé. Difficilmente catalogabili, artistoidi, entusiasti e sempre appassionati di qualcosa, dalla cucina creativa al teatro sperimentale. Vederli tutti insieme in uno di quegli eventi professionali di cui i non addetti ai lavori non sospettano minimamente l’esistenza, fa quasi impressione.

Io, che a molti di questi eventi partecipo dietro le quinte, ho avuto modo di a osservarli per bene: quelli che siedono in platea sono mossi da quella fame di cui parlava Mr Apple e da un'ammirazione stupita, come una matricola di sociologia inaspettatamente a tu per tu con Zygmunt Bauman.

Quelli che si esibiscono riescono a creare on stage magie che vanno ben oltre un taglio, facendo uscire dalle loro mani giochi di prestigio, affreschi di visioni con coordinate spazio temporali disparate e sempre intensamente vivide.

Fra pochi giorni, il 18 e 19 gennaio 2016, arriverà il momento di mettere in scena la 17ma edizione del WWWH, evento che la haircare company Davines organizza ogni anno in una top location del globo. Quest'anno sarà la volta di Los Angeles ed io ci sarò.

Non sono elettrizzata solo perché dopo tanto tempo torno a fare una trasferta cosi lontano, perché per la prima volta i miei bambini faranno l'esperienza di vivere 9 giorni con amici, perché non mi sembrerà vero di fare solo lavoro professionale per una settimana (e zero lavoro domestico!) ma... Perché per la prima volta lo storytelling è entrato nella creazione del WWHT!

Innanzitutto, a differenza di tutte le edizioni precedenti, in cui ogni stilista sceglieva individualmente il tema a cui ispirarsi per mettere in scena la sua collezione di immagini, abbiamo scelto di dare un tema comune.

Non solo. Abbiamo scelto un tema meta narrativo (che ha a che fare in sé e per sé con la narrazione): la creazione del personaggio. Ad ogni stilista è stato chiesto di mettersi nei panni di un regista teatrale o cinematografico, creando dei personaggi che raccontino una storia.

Ho confezionato una “Guida in 10 punti per creare uno show di successo” e mi sono divertita a supportare gli stilisti con una fucina di idee, script e spunti per contestualizzare in una narrazione i loro stimoli visivi.

Cosi - secondo la filosofia del personal storytelling - ad ognuno il suo: il tema del doppio nei supereroi dei fumetti anni ’60, lo stile memoir scritto a lettera 24, l'amore catartico di Romeo e Giulietta di Shakespeare visto con le lenti strobo di Baz Luhrmann, l’estetica della percezione di Peter Hoeg nel suo “Il senso di Smilla per la neve”, fino alla fiaba della natura e del paesaggio “Il giardino delle meraviglie” di Hans Christian Andersen.

Ora ... the show must start! Ed io non vedo l'ora di schiacciare Play All e scoprire che forma avranno preso le storie tra le mani dei parrucchieri.

Elisa Giulietta

tags: Storytelling, Davines, World Wide Hair Tour, WWHT2016, giulietta kelly, Personal Storytelling, Angelo Seminara, 00:am
Tuesday 01.12.16
Posted by 00:am
 

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