Fashion forward: Northumbria celebrates 30 years of Graduate Fashion Week
While 2021 has heralded the return to the runway for in-person fashion shows internationally, it also marks the 30th anniversary of an event which has become one of the world’s most important sources of new talent for the global design industry.
Graduate Fashion Week was founded in 1991 to unify both the UK and later international universities to create a stronghold for the industry to help find the best creatives of the future.
Northumbria is one of just a few universities where staff and students from Fashion programmes became involved in the London-based event from the very beginning.
Since then, more than 80 leading universities around the world have become involved with the annual showcase and 100,000 graduates have been supported to display their skills.
In June, a hybrid approach saw the 30th event go ahead with design exhibitions, a live-streamed runway show and a digital portfolio platform to make the work of up and coming designers more accessible all year round.
Northumbria School of Design has an established reputation at Graduate Fashion Week, with students winning over 40 awards in the last few years, including New Designer of the Year, the Fashion Innovation Award and the Ethical Award.
Emma Jane Goldsmith, Senior Lecturer in Fashion at Northumbria, said the event helps to bridge the gap between graduation and employment and is responsible for launching the careers of some of the most successful designers of our time, including Stella McCartney and Christopher Bailey.
What is most impressive is the platform Graduate Fashion Week gives students to be recognised within the industry. We support them through the event to understand what employers are looking for in ways which remain relevant to current trends.
There’s a lot of nostalgia around Graduate Fashion Week for me. I’m one of a number of Northumbria alumni who now teach here.
We remember the event as students and recognise the excitement of being able to showcase something so personal to you – that doesn’t go away.
Douglas MacLennan is Chairman of the Graduate Fashion Foundation which organises Graduate Fashion Week, and former Design School Director - International Development and Recruitment at Northumbria.
Reflecting in the past 30 years, he said:
In 1991 the vast majority of the UK high street fashions were supplied by UK manufacturers and Graduate Fashion Week was seen as a ‘one stop shop’ for industry to engage with Higher Education and source the best UK-trained fashion talent.
The event started with just ten Fashion and two Fashion Marketing programmes, including Northumbria, and has grown considerably to become the world’s biggest showcase of BA Fashion talent, attracting global attention and participation from industry, including Ralph Lauren, Gap Inc. and LVMH.
The last two years, have brought a unique set of challenges. Covid-19 had a huge impact but, crucially, it never succeeded in quelling the incredible creativity and innovation our Fashion graduates are world renowned for.
We are proud to state that in the darker days of 2020 we were the only art and design subject area to retain and deliver a national graduate exhibition. Showcasing and elevating the work of our graduates has been the focus of the foundation for 30 years and we were determined not to deliver any differently for those working and graduating in the midst of Covid restrictions.
As we move forward towards 2022 and beyond, I am delighted to see that the global fashion industry is once again reviving catwalk shows, and no doubt providing huge inspiration for those that are embarking on a new academic year.What is most impressive is the platform Graduate Fashion Week gives students to be recognised within the industry. We support them through the event to understand what employers are looking for in ways which remain relevant to current trends.
Emma Jane added:
To celebrate three decades of Graduate Fashion Week, we wanted to showcase a retrospective of our alumni and their current roles in industry. Here, we celebrate their success and the past graduate collections of these former Northumbria students, who have excelled across all fashion disciplines and genres since graduating.
Source