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Aalto University Magazine 18

Page 37

long time to create a culture of openness, where we can discuss anything. Creating an experimental atmosphere where we encourage people to make mistakes was another goal because it really is the only way to learn.”

showing clothes in an industry way to industry people. That is also why the show is long. And the headhunters are there to see the clothes. The fashion show requires an insane amount of work, work that is both at a very high level artistically and product-wise.”

Show craze Tuomas Laitinen stresses the importance of working in the field you teach, while you teach, as an utter necessity. “The relevance of people changes, as does that of phenomena, and you have to be there to know and feel it.” Laitinen has willingly put his extensive and relevant networks at the service of his students. His contacts have been indispensable, especially in relation to the fashion show arranged each spring by the University. This show has become the key element in Aalto’s continuously growing reputation as a fashion school. “The biggest change happened in 2012 when we held the first show in the Suvilahti cultural centre in Helsinki. That same year, Helsinki was the World Design Capital and our student Satu Maaranen won the Grand Prix at Hyères. There was all the attention because of that and we had 20 foreign guests. That was a watershed, now it’s madness! Last year, we hosted iD, Dazed, Italian Vogue, Chinese Vogue, Japanese Vogue as well as headhunters from LVMH and Kering. Sometimes I wonder if the students think it’s normal to have Michel Gaubert in the front row or to have your graduate collection styled by the same person who styles Balenciaga!” In addition to the show being a formidable marketing tool for the University, it is also essential in promoting the students and their work. “The show is not for someone choosing a coat to wear that summer, it is about

Fashions’ future Tuomas Laitinen finds the persistence of the idea of fashion as a frivolous industry frustrating. “People still refuse to understand the sheer turnover or money that fashion brings and the jobs it creates. It’s one of the biggest industries in the world. They also don’t understand high fashion and often think what we do is too artistic or too individual, but it does actually serve the industry. We also work with many mass market companies like H&M who want the same students Balenciaga or Lanvin want because they are after the same kind of creativity.” Laitinen’s mission as a teacher is solid and straight-forward. “I think that, if you work in education, you should have one prime responsibility: educating people so they have a chance to find employment, live full lives and be a part of society.” However, as many of the best students are hired to work abroad in fashion capitals like Paris, London, Milan and New York straight after graduation, concerns are voiced about local talent dispersing. “What we can do is provide Finnish people with very wide knowledge, skills and creativity that can be sold to foreign clients and which have the potential of becoming big business.” The successes of recent years are, to Laitinen, a logical result of the wholehearted effort put into developing

the fashion education programme. “Of course it feels nice because it’s been a lot of work for everybody! I’m not the only one here, there’s a whole team of tutors and professors, and the people who work in the studios must not be forgotten either. Our huge, decade-long team effort is now finally bearing fruit.” Tuomas Laitinen wants us to know that now is not the time to get comfortable nor to fix what is not broken. “This really is the beginning of things, not the end. We are doing something right, but that should be developed much further and the freedom to do so should not be compromised.”

_ Tuomas Laitinen completed his BA degree at the University of Art and Design Helsinki in 2001 and graduated with a distinction from the MA fashion course at Central Saint Martins in London, 2004. In 2006, with his sister Anna, he won the special mention of the Jury Prize at the Hyéres Festival. The prize was strongly supported by the competition’s head of the jury Ann Demeulemeester and it enabled the Laitinens to launch their collection Laitinen in 2007. For seven continuous years Laitinen was stocked at leading retailers across Europe, Asia and US. Laitinen Autumn-Winter 2014 collection was also featured in the Hunger Games Mockingjay Part I and II Hollywood films. Currently Laitinen is the Fashion Director of SSAW Magazine and works as a consultant for various industry clients and contributes to international publications including Harper’s Bazaar China and L’Officiel Hommes Paris. He has been a lecturer in fashion design at Aalto University since 2006.

Ones to watch:

1. “Elli Savolainen, graduated with a BA in 2001, currently Design Director of Saint Laurent menswear in Paris. Long career behind the scenes both at Christian Dior and Saint Laurent, probably the Finn with the biggest chances of becoming a Creative Director of a major international fashion house.”

2. “Kaisa Inari Kinnunen, graduated with an MA in 2011. Currently works for Balenciaga in Paris under the Creative Director Demna Gvasalia as a research designer, which is an important member of any creative team and an unknown position to many unaware of the fashion system.”

3. “Sophie Sälekari, graduated with a BA in 2015, print designer at Alexander McQueen in London and finalist at Hyéres Festival 2015. Sophie’s opulent style is very much what is wanted in fashion right now. Previous work experience at H&M shows that the opposite ends of the fashion ladder are often after the same talent.”

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Aalto University Magazine 18 by Aalto University / Aalto-yliopisto - Issuu