VMAN Presents: The New New York
The American menswear landscape has long been ruled by tradition and big corporations. This season, disorder emerges and a new vision catches light.
The American menswear landscape has long been ruled by tradition and big corporations. This season, disorder emerges and a new vision catches light.
KIRK MILLAR, LINDER
“I think [urban life] America is about a non-conformist, effortless, style; a pair of great jeans, and an old tee with sneakers or boots…that’s NYC to me. Let it get worn out, ripped, and dirty. The swagger and individualism of a Hollywood protagonist has infiltrated our culture’s views on the self, persona and attitude.”
NEIL GROTZINGER, NIHL
“I’m happy that I’m able to disrupt the system and throw challenges into the mix, but I think there’s still a lot more potential for American menswear to come out of its shell. My brand revolves around the concept of subverting masculine stereotypes into objects of queer empowerment.”
KOZABURO AKASAKA, KOZABURO
“[Kozaburo as a brand is] an expression of a belief—bridging and breaking the boundaries of East and West in culture and spirituality through my personal narrative. The Kozaburo man is a bare man who walks in the desert with a coyote.”
RAUL SOLIS, LRS
“I’m targeting a man who interested in current culture and self-expression. Someone who is creative, rebellious and interested in design. A self-expressive individual who is willing to push norms. Someone dressing with no age, no gender, body type or culture uniforms [in mind].”