Suzanne Lee
Suzanne Lee (born 1970)[1][2] is a Brooklyn, New York based fashion designer working on fashion and future technologies.
She is a Senior Research Fellow at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, the Director of The BioCouture Research Project, and Chief Creative Officer at Modern Meadow.
Her recent Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) funded project BioCouture looks at ecological and sustainability issues surrounding fashion. She is working with scientists to engineer optimized organisms for growing future consumer products.
In 2007 she published Fashioning the Future: Tomorrow's Wardrobe. The book examines the work of the scientific researchers and fashion designers, such as Issey Miyake, Hussein Chalayan, and Walter Van Beirendonck, who are transforming today’s science fiction into tomorrow’s reality.
BioCouture
BioCouture is a research project using nature to suggest an innovative future fashion vision. Suzanne Lee uses microbial cellulose (composed of millions of tiny bacteria grown in bathtubs of sweet green tea) to produce clothing. The idea is to grow a dress in a vat of liquid.[3]
BioCouture has been included in Time Magazine's annual roundup of The Top 50 Best Inventions of 2010.[4]
References
- ↑ Venkataramanan, Madhumita (2 January 2014). "Biocouture from the lab to the high street". Wired.co.uk.
Lee, 43
- ↑ Grose, Jessica (4 March 2014). "Making Clothes from Microbes". mental_floss.
Lee, 44
- ↑ "BioCouture official website". BioCouture.co.uk.
- ↑ Luscombe, Belinda (11 November 2010). "The 50 Best Inventions of 2010: Clothing - BioCouture". Time.
Further reading
- Suzanne Lee, "Fashioning the Future: Tomorrow's Wardrobe", Thames & Hudson, 2005
- Nicholas Jordan, "From teabags to T-shirts", The Australian, 30 May 2011
- Stefania Vourazeri, "V.O.W N°8 // BioCouture by Suzanne Lee", Yatzer, 25 February 2011
External links
- Official website of BioCouture
- Suzanne Lee at TED
- Bio-Couture on Exposureroom, Video for the new Trash Fashion exhibition at the Science Museum (archived in 2011)