Is jw anderson gay

Last year Jonathan Anderson released a JW Anderson collaboration with Tom of Finland and it instantly sold out. Monitoring that success, the Irish designer now brings a sophomore capsule that expands on those initial accessory drops with a selection of ready-to-wear pieces.

An untitled image by Finnish draughtsman Touko Laaksonen (aka Tom of Finland) leads the collection, depicting a ToF man in signature uniform – leather boots, gloves, cap and crotch piece – drawn across t-shirts, shirting, hoodies, bags and shorts. Penis keyrings and Cap bags finish the collection, fitted with kinky studs and piercings.

“We had such a fine time working on the first collection and working with the Foundation was a pleasure,” said Anderson about the second round of the capsule. “As a gay gentleman and a architect, Tom of Finland has always fascinated me. I compile all types of art including his drawings. To be able to exploit them in a JW Anderson collection is so stimulating. I am really proud of this year’s collection and love that we were able to expand it to include ready-to-wear.”

Jonathan Anderson&

10 Things We Want From JW Anderson&#;s Rebrand

Just over a week ago, Jonathan Anderson made history. Serving up his debut Dior men’s collection with a muted flurry of iconoclast shorts, coats and capes, the Irish designer officially became the first sole creative director of the French maison since Monsieur Dior. A colossal career, as you might predict, it comes with a total of 10 collections a year – with the work he’s doing at his own trademark, JW Anderson, piling up on top of that. If there’s any dude up for the position, it is Anderson, but that hasn’t stopped the rumours from swirling around what his plans are for his namesake label. Will it shutter? Will it stay? Will he still take to the runway? Today, our curiosities were quelled. JW Anderson is getting a completely new concept. 

Becoming something akin to a modern-day cabinet of curiosities, the modern JW Anderson will point on “objects of elevated craftsmanship” – so homewares and artisanal goods – as good as curated fashion collections, with a magpie sensibility centred around this thought of collecting and curating. In the coming month

There was a time when a man was only as good as his best suit. In Luca Guadagnino’s Queer, William Lee, an aimless gay author and addict played by Daniel Craig, stalks the streets of s Mexico City wearing a summer-weight beige two-piece. Soiled around the edges and soaked with sweat and dregs of tequila, it’s the skin of a dandy undone: compact enough to be folded into a suitcase, made for drinking, cruising and going dwelling to your typewriter – and heroin.

Queer, adapted from William S. Burroughs’ autobiographical novella of the same identify, is the second costume collaboration between between Guadagnino and Jonathan Anderson, Loewe creative director and JW Anderson founder. For Anderson, finding a suit that was authentic to the period, one with texture and wear, was critical to fleshing out the character. “It is a period of time that, for me, is fundamental in the birth of the modern male,” Anderson says. “A period that is very subtle, but ultimately, there&#;s a lot of depth to what menswear was going through.”

Far from the thigh-baring limited shorts an

The Story Behind JW Anderson’s Collaboration with Tom of Finland

Arriving in JW Anderson’s Soho store and online today, the collaboration will celebrate the legendary queer artist’s boundary-pushing work. Here, Jonathan Anderson tells us the story behind the pieces

TextJack Moss

The Northern Irish designer Jonathan Anderson first discovered the work of Finnish draughtsman Touko Laaksonen – better known by professional moniker Tom of Finland – inside old copies of Physique Pictorial, the Bob Mizer-edited ‘beefcake’ magazine which was first published in the s. Known for his erotic illustrations of hyper-masculine archetypes, from muscled cowboys and lumberjacks to shirtless sailors and leather-clad cops, Tom of Finland’s work is a proud and subversive depiction of gay sexuality, first disseminated to the world through sex shops and underground bookstores prolonged before homosexuality was made legal in his home country in “For him to be coming up with an aesthetic prefer he did was way before his time,” Anderson tells AnOther. “I think he is someone who has really changed homosexual