Enfant Terrible – the latest collection from Kidill

words Alexa Wang

With his Fall/Winter collection, Hiroaki Sueyasu the artistic director of Kidill connects with the pure undiluted spirit that emanates from the individual. The desperate search for one’s identity and the reaffirmation of that identity once found is the spark that ignites it all.

It is entitled Enfant Terrible who can be best described as a wild, unorthodox child trying to break through into that strange world of adolescence. This is someone who at once shocks and excites both adults and fellow creatures of teen alike. She, he or they are searching for that identity using the tools of youth culture and adornment to express themselves and forge a future.

Enfant Terrible collection Kidill
Enfant Terrible Kidill
Enfant Terrible Kidill

Enfant Terrible

­The feelings that overflow from an individual, pure and unclouded, are like the “water” that fills a depleted vessel. Hiroaki Sueyasu, ruminating on his fundamental mindset toward creation, strongly reconnects with his “core,” which he assures eternal, through the Fall-Winter 2023 collection.

Sueyasu being devoted to the masterpieces and countless films of Spike Jonze, Harmony Korine, Danny Boyle, and the documentaries of the Z-Boys capturing the precarious atmosphere of teenagers, depicting a dangerous connection between the sense of loss and the everyday life of youth-including skating and punk, creating empathy on a spiritual level to find all the beauty and ugliness in the unevenness of each life, the confusion and salvation, shadow and light. ­e events that coincide with the old skate are the most proximate to the collection.

Through the collaboration with DC SHOES and DC skaters, Sueyasu’s most present-tense emotions are clearly expressed in the collection. He applies multi-prints to military materials that evoke the DIY atmosphere of old
skateboarding which landed a meet of the tweeds and tulles and pursued on to the unexpectedness of the combination of the bijoux and the ribbons. Foregrounding the do-it-yourself spirit more than ever was a manifestation of the skaters’reverence for a mindset that values freedom, and the most unrestrained approach to conjure the “core” of Sueyasu more than ever.

In addition to the ample perceptions captured by the ongoing dialogue with many collaborators, and with the noise ambience of Wong Kar-wai’s films – the smoky air, the dreary grass and flowers, the decadent and chaotic mood, the sharp gaze gliding the gender gap eliciting the texture of a deteriorated wall paper reflected in the combination of denim and girl prints adding to the quintessential of KIDILL’s interpretation of the boy’s look inducing the masculinity and the charm at the crux of the collection.Th­us the image of each individual living their days and immersing themselves in skating as to fill the void of depletion, and dissatisfaction, only then can they discover another reality and desire of their own, developing a connection with their peers to be saved. ­e decisive purity being the outset of their actions synchronizes with the “essential freedom” that Sueyasu himself continues to covet throughout his life. “Fashion saved me,” he said, recalling the fateful initial impulse that led him to start his creations in London, following his own feelings alone.

“I am saved as in the past by moving my hands as I desire to customizing vintage clothes without refrains. I can plunge my frustrations both residing in reality and imagination to form a structure to my “likes”, a fact that will never not change.”

Although the “likes” sometimes binds us, at the same time brings out freedom. What is certain for oneself is to be eternally connected to one’s “core,” which is pure, and believable. ­is is the beauty of one’s own style. Whatever name maybe given to, processing on updating, never standing still, and never feeling left to run dry to construct a new counterpoint. ­e enfants terribles is the current statement of KIDILL.

For more information visit http://www.kidill.jp/

Show Director : Michio Hoshina *PLANKTON
Stylist : Tatsuya Shimada
Make-up : Kanako Yoshida
Casting : Taka Arakawa, Jose Maria *ALTER
Production : Devi Sok
Collection Photos : Kyohei Hattori
Back Stage Photos : Shono Inoue
Show Coordinator : Azusa Nozaki
Writer : Tatsuya Yamaguchi
Artwork : Tom Tosseyn, maya Shibasaki
Collaboration : DC Shoes, CA4LA, Malcolm Guerre, rurumu:
International Press : Totem fashion
Japan Press : Sakas PR
International Sales : Kohei Sato
Support : DC Shoes
Movie Director : Yusuke Ishida
Music : Grimm Grimm
KIDILL Designer : Hiroaki Sueyasu

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