SEASCAPE: THE VISUAL HARMONIES OF AQUATIC AESTHETICS AND ARTISTRY

SEASCAPE: THE VISUAL HARMONIES OF AQUATIC AESTHETICS AND ARTISTRY

At GLITCH we have been noticing the rise of Seascape. The visual theme is inspired by the element of love: the sea. As we cling onto the last days of summer, we can expect to see more shells, oysters, and scaly materials, with many designers testing out the water. 

Seascape is a product of the recent Mermaid Core trend, which rose following the Little Mermaid film, starring ​​Halle Bailey which was released in May. Seascape has carried on the legacy of Mermaid Core, relating to all things water, but has come to encompass a whole visual aesthetic, including accessories, fonts, and materials. Seascape is noticeable for the details, with the defining characteristics being an emphasis on aquatic colors (blue, green, and grey tones), water imagery,  flowing silhouettes, and atmospheric coastal backgrounds. 

  

Iris Van Herpen’s Fall/Winter 2023, “Architectonics” collection is the epitome of seascape. Van Herpen describes how the collection was inspired by “Aquatic Architecture and Bionic Innovations. Drawing inspiration from the future of floating cities and the concept of bionic design, this pioneering collection reflects a vision where humans inhabit both land and offshore environments.” Van Herpen looks into  “aquatic urbanism” which reimagines how humans live with water. Citing the first floating city Oceanix in South Korea, the collection looks into how fashion, architecture, and technology can overlap. Oceanix designed by starchitect Bjarke Ingels is the first waterborne urbanism, which uses zero waste and circular systems, closed-loop water systems, net-zero energy, and coastal habitat regeneration, creating a new vision for how humans live in the future.

 

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