Yohji Yamamoto
<div class="margin-bottom" id="description_text_headlines"> <div> <strong>The art of anti-fashion</strong></div> <div>  </div> <div> <strong>Yohji Yamamoto: The fashion designer who redesigned fashion</strong></div> <div>  </div> </div> <div class="description_text"> <div class="margin-bottom" id="description_text"> As one of the most mentally rigorous designers working in fashion, <strong>Yohji Yamamoto </strong>creates garments that can be intellectual—sometimes even difficult—yet always beautiful. Yohji’s free-spirited world is explored here via <em>i-D</em> magazine’s archives starting back in the 1980s, including his adoration for women and the female form, the painful process of creating anti-fashion through fashion and how his timeless utilitarian designs can be both avant-garde and classic at once.<br /> <br /> Packed into 120 pages is biographical and personal information as well as imagery from over 30 years of <em>i-D</em>’s history with images from photographers including <strong>Paolo Roversi,</strong> <strong>Max Vadukul</strong>, and <strong>Nick Knight</strong>, plus interviews with <strong>Jamie Huckbody</strong>, <strong>Holly Shackleton</strong>, and <strong>Terry Jones</strong>.</div> <div class="margin-bottom">  </div> <div class="margin-bottom"> Text in English, French, German, and Spanish</div> </div>