15 minute read

On Streetwear with Virgil Abloh

I found it very difficult to approach writing this story for someone so exceedingly self-aware of his position in our current culture that delivers eloquent lectures, holds panel discussions that clearly outline his approach to design, and is able to describe his work in the context of preexisting and current culture. In plain words, Virgil is hyper-conscious of all that he is doing and why it’s effectively met with high praise.

For weeks I hopped from cafe to cafe, hoping the change of scenery would inspire me, but I was stuck. Growing up an admitted “hypebeast,” attempting to comment upon Virgil’s achievements in the past year—the countless ways he has impacted this culture I’ve grown up on—seemed to be a task for which I felt slightly under-qualified. But on this fated Sunday morning, days before deadline, it came rushing to me. I tumbled out of the shower, grabbed my iPhone off the edge of sink, and frantically mashed away on the Notes app—all the while soaking wet, dripping still-soapy water on the bathroom tiles.

Maybe it’s because of his 3% rule: never taking a design more than 3% from its original form. He doesn’t have to—he’s fine with leaving a design the way it is and has a healthy respect for the beauty of something in its pure form. Much in the same vein, we don’t need to fit his story into some grand-notion journalistic endeavor—his story tells itself, and we’re simply taking our due turn in being the assistant.

With that said, let me share with you my experience with Virgil.

The day I spent with him, in November, the tail end of his absolutely breakout 2017 year, was a jampacked one. It was the only day he was going to be in NYC, and the day consisted of two separate location photoshoots, a private gallery visit, a bookstore visit, and a concert, which he DJ’ed. Virgil had just arrived at JFK that morning and was scheduled to leave the following afternoon—a quick peek at his IG stories and you can catch that this may be the most traveled man in the world at the moment—with his design studio in Paris, his “home” in Chicago, and his Off-White™ flagship stores in Tokyo, Hong Kong, New York and Singapore. He travels so much, he has plans to create an installation that shows his flights just in 2017, via a red string on a map—“All you’d see is red.”

We cycled through a range of different social settings, that otherwise may have begged for a change in attire, Virgil donned the same Supreme white tee, washed Off-White™ jeans and his own Nike AF-1 collaborative sneakers throughout. As I followed him from location to location across New York City, I also observed that he was at the same time always present, but never truly there. Constantly splitting his attention between his iPhone and what was in front of him, Virgil acted—and reacted—as if teetering upon this fine line of existence. He was at once, conscious of the task/project at hand and the (very storied) players involved, but also detached from the reality of the situation. I realized this served as an advantage to Virgil and his work because he could not overanalyze the situation, and this exemplifies his entire design ethos.

At his Harvard lecture, he explained his “3% approach,” alongside his method of completing just 70% of his projects before moving to the next project, allowing him to work on a million projects at once. Throughout the day, I watch Virgil come in and out of engagement with photographers, stylists, PR people, gallerist, friends, myself, so on and so forth. Each time I asked Virgil a question, he’d listen, acknowledge and respond to it, while concurrently carrying on his separate conversation on WhatsApp. While this may seem to be counterintuitive to many, and borderline offensive to some, nothing can be said of Virgil’s actions because he always delivers, in every single situation—whether it be his collaborations with Jimmy Choo or his collection in conjunction with IKEA—something truly unique and yet universally praised almost always comes from it.

After the photoshoots—which not coincidently both included him as a subject—we arrived at an abandoned, seemingly under-construction church, where, Virgil explained, he was interested in viewing an exhibit taking place on the top floor. As we stepped into each art space, a single piece was placed into individual rooms of the church; Virgil was fully immersed, observing and inquiring. Shifting from designer and producer at the photoshoots to student and active participant.

Going from the chaos of a photoshoot to being shuffled through a gallery, to now casually flipping through books, we made a quick pit stop to art book store Printed Matter, in search of a specific book by Virgil’s favorite artist, David Hammond. After which, Virgil finally admitted he needed to take a break and resided back to the Mercer—his hotel of choice and the set the Uzi video he directed for “XO Tour Llif3.” The 8 a.m. to now 5 p.m. journey had me personally spent, just from observing—and until then, I’d realized, I hadn’t seen Virgil eat nor drink anything. I assumed he went for food and a nap, but who knows.

Fast-forward two hours, I found myself in the green room of the New York Expo Centre, where Virgil was set to open for Travis Scott’s Halloween show. By now, I was mentally checked out, I had seen all I needed to see of Virgil’s cutthroat-paced life, until I was faced with another revelation. This one came in the form of two teenage kids. As I was walking into the back entrance of the venue, two kids show up—they must have been no more than 15. They were holding T-shirts and hoodies and trying to convince the security guard that Virgil had told them to come. I bought their story as much as the guard did. Moments later, I head back to the green room only to find Virgil had retrieved these teenagers; not only that, but eagerly introducing them to me, saying he met them on Instagram, that they’re special and need to be seen—“This is Kevin, he’s from HYPEBEAST, you guys need to meet. These kids are up next.” With 3% of his job done, he left and went onstage.

In the span of the 16 hours and five locations, and all that went on throughout that day, this was by far the most shocking, yet eye-opening and telling event that occurred. At one instance I was pulled back into why I myself was doing all of this. Virgil reminded me that the reason we needed to publish him for our 20th issue’s cover story as the seminal X-factor is because through all he’s come to accomplish—all the wildly unfathomable collaborations and the expansion into couture fashion—he comes from our culture. He comes from sneaker lineups, and comes from BAPE and Supreme. And through his work, he’s tirelessly looking to represent this culture, bringing light and legitimacy to streetwear.

At the start of this story I thought, I’ll find out once and for all, what all fashion folk and hypebeasts alike are wondering—if Virgil is a hack of a designer and artist, or if he’s a true genius that transcends what we can comprehend.

But as I went through it all, following him through his day, he wasn’t this anomaly to figure out or prove for or against. He isn’t going to get placed because he’s simply doing what makes sense. He can’t be labelled an artist, designer, or a genius, and he doesn’t look to be. He simply does what makes sense to him and what he believes is doing right for the people. He isn’t an artist because he’s not necessarily doing things for himself—after all, art is selfish as they say. It’s very apparent he’s doing it for others and his eyes are fixed on the idea of the grander landscape of art and culture. He simply sees himself as a part of the streetwear community—the same community that we, and he himself grew up in. And he truly believes, having witnessed this community grow in not only in breadth but depth, that it has become a movement of its own. “I feel like I’m a descendent of anyone from Kanye West to Pharrell Williams to Basquiat or Warhol. I’m no one as the first statement. Second statement is, we’re part of a generation, a movement that goes beyond the website HYPEBEAST.”

As I write this on my iPhone notes as a stream of consciousness, I harken back to Virgil saying Off- White™ is the first brand created solely on the iPhone. A brand he calls a concept more than a tangible thing. And I feel okay writing my cover story on my phone at this very moment, days before our deadline. Virgil has kicked down this professional or proverbial door of needing to be the model of perfection, of what’s expected—but because he knows what needs to be done and he knows himself, accepting of it.

The same way guys like Basquiat or Pollock reflected on current culture and presented it back to the world, Virgil is doing the same, and in many ways doing it better by masking it from potential debate. He’s landed this concept of streetwear and our—yes, our once-niche culture into every realm, taking established brands that have stories and meaning like Nike and IKEA, and updating them to be relevant now. Connecting high and low, wearing a T-shirt and Jordans to his couture art show in Paris—and getting Naomi Campbell, Roger Federer, Kim Jones, Drake and Michael Jordan all sharing the same shoes.

From my correspondences with Virgil, I learned a few things—about myself. When I asked Virgil what qualifier comes closest to what he does at this very moment, he explained—he isn’t any one thing, but simply an assistant to the ones who came before him. Virgil makes all of us treading through this cultural and creative field feel vindicated, justified—or okay with just loving what we love, doing what we do, and just being the sum of these parts rather than any one thing. Moreover, Virgil’s actions and accomplishments have made it okay for myself—a product of street culture & this “streetwear” mentality—to be accepted.

Now, I can wear a hoody to a job interview.

Q&A

First off, are you an artist or a designer? What do you call yourself?

More than anything, I feel like Iʼm a descendant of anyone from Kanye West to Pharrell Williams to Basquiat or Warhol. I'm no one as the first statement. Second statement is, we're part of a generation, a movement that goes beyond the website HYPEBEAST. Before, we were sort of documenting these products, there was the sex shops with Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren; it was NIGO and Hiroshi crisscrossing and sharing streetwear ideas. You know I draw that line all the way back to the Renaissance, you know these art movements. Essentially I'm just an assistant to the people that came before me, trying to add to the design that goes forward for the next generation to continue. I'm not anything, I'm just a creative. There's different words or boxes to put types of creativity into, which I'm not that preoccupied with. I'm only interested in making relevant ideas.

You speak extensively about your own work in lectures and discussion. Why do you find it necessary to do so?

It's a design. Those lectures are systems to communicate an idea, and a lot of what I think is missing from our culture is discourse. Whether it be critical, whether it be instructional or motivating. Whether it be "here's how to actually do this, just don't be a consumer." To me, it's only better if this community of streetwear actually grows and is a foundation. So it's not me just a lone ranger exploring ideas, going out to achieve something for myself—that's not interesting to me. Only thing interesting to me is my own body of work, and work and creating, but as you said HYPEBEAST comments themselves are interesting, that sort of culture. I don't read any of them, but I can identify with that sense of critique humor and expressiveness that should dictate what the products will look like that are up top of those comments. It's a community, and I'm interested in that. I can see an image and already know what the comments are. To me that's a valuable design skill. I could discount it, but I don't like it; I think it's our barometer if a T-shirt is worthy of being made or not. If a sneaker is actually adding to the culture.

Having your hands in both streetwear and couture, you’ve acted as this bridge between high and low. How do you see your effect on this?

I want the larger fashion industry and ecosystem to not see us as this sort of fly-by-night, this sort of hyper-consumer—there's real discerning taste. There's kids in our community that know Helmut Lang collections by heart. There's kids with crazy archive collections and they also understand the camaraderie amongst themselves. They understand that true mix. My only contention was that there's no designer that manifested that. There's a lot now, which I think is great.

How has coming from streetwear affected your work until now?

It's me, the same 17-year-old version of myself. Skating. Listening to rap music, Nirvana, Guns N’ Roses—I'm just older and I've made a profession out of it. On one hand, it's not work by any means. I'm just being a free-form creative, but it's my life. It's my creative expression.

In your own words, how is your work impacting the culture most?

My project embedded at the core, I'd say, is humanity and education. We can use design, we can use trends, we can use brands to share good ideas to share information. So, that's my main motivating factor, I just use it as proof. Yeah you can go to a job interview in a hoody, you shouldn't be hired depending on whether or not you have the right costume or the right persona. It's all about personal expression—clothes are just tools to make a collage about yourself so that people can understand what you know.

I see “The Ten” as the physical embodiment of this impact—Eric Koston, Naomi Campbell—was there a strategy to this?

Zero strategy, it was just my phone. I always made it a point to be friends with a varied group of people. It was just a design conversation. Make something that was valuable. A shoe is a shoe, how can you know it's going to bridge all these gaps? You know someone who is obsessed with sneakers and someone that just literally doesn't care. Crossing all boundaries of, “Is it streetwear? Is it high fashion? Is it for the young, the old?” For me, I'm thankful for the response, but that's what I designed. That's probably goal number one: make something that people cherish. We shouldn't be making more shoes if they're not different to me. They should have a reason for existing.

There's been other people in the past who wanted to iterate on the Swoosh or mess with the Nike logo, but they weren't allowed to. Why do you think to Nike, you were the right person to remix all their shoes in this way?

I think timing. A lot of people came before in a different era. This current era, there's a lot more freedom. Kids on Instagram are Photoshopping checks backwards. It's just cultures moving, it's been like that before now, we're not the only ones to discover this. You can go either a punk route, which is just self-serving to the artist or you can go with "good will" and I took that approach. My thing with all the edits to the Nike is just reinforcing the iconography or the principles of the brand. I was using it as a dialogue, Roger Federer hitting tennis balls in the Jordan that say his name on it, it's like—Jordan is getting kicked out of the league because it's just a style choice that's against the rules. Or Andre Agassi wearing street clothes, to me it was a conscious 'hey, I'm just turning the wheel back,' but the point is to underline Nike's innovation, what's important to the brand and me as an outside designer. I can choose to exalt or put down, and the idea was to exalt it onto a level and find new space. So, in the end there wasn't any editing of my proposal, be it on the actual shoe or the Off-Campus concept.

The idea of streetwear or street culture, what is it in your mind?

It's a sort of camaraderie, it's a collective, a community. It's this sort of international community that never existed in such a cemented way. We have this thing social media that we can communicate and we are just a world of young people, no longer just a niche culture in one city of young people. Therein lies, I think, some sort of new space. A kid in Tokyo and a kid in Kansas are essentially talking to each other.

We at HYPEBEAST see you delivering our culture somewhere, pushing it forward and breaking down walls. It feels like there will be a culmination to all this, and we want to know what you think this will be?

I think we're soon to be at that cusp. I've said this before, my idea is that all Rodeo Drive is updated, Madison Avenue has a storied history of brands, but this new era and style of design has given that as a background and you get this refreshed approach about design and culture, and those are inside the most storied brands. I think we're a niche culture of designers and I think we're a new niche culture of artists. The more we make collectively, and support and foster that, we're going to see great works of art, great design, great collections again—if that community is fostered. One designer pushes another, one artist does an amazing show; you get this sort of synergy.

What is coming up next for you? Also, what else is coming up that will be impacting the culture in the future?

I've been focused on this, like streetwear might be an art movement that we just don't know. We might just be giving it the short end of the stick and called it a skate brand. That's what my work is focused on, not necessarily limiting myself to this way of thinking and having a dialogue of fashion, fashion history, but instead on how can we can make different product across all realms. I think Uber is a streetwear-type idea. To me, I often use "streetwear" as a shorthand terminology for being creative, but limited to memes. Almost readymade memes. That's how a lot of this culture started. That's why I use "streetwear" in quotes. It's not limited or degraded by this sort of youth obsession with a box logo T-shirt. It's a way of thinking. We're at the cusp of it, we're only five years deep. Obviously the start was Dog Town Z-boys, here we have a shop, a skate shop— you can't discount all the steps that got us here. NIGO developing BAPE to be a luxury brand and Nom De Guerre Prohibit, the list goes on. That's my ambition, to sort of project that into the next 10 years. Like, “Oh wow, he came from this school of thought,” this is what he was thinking, but now we have gallery shows and X Y Z, and there's these things that came from this sort of ethos in culture.

So in a way, streetwear is already much more in terms of a concept and a movement.

Somebody just needs to take a pen and just draw a line 16 times and then it's just confidence in the movement, and then it can go further.

Words: Kevin Wong

Photography: Mark Borthwick