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Agender, Faye Toogood, Selfridges, 2015
Rawsthorn suggests another possibility: an aesthetic that aims for multiplicity, not neutrality. “It’s also possible to reflect the plethora of possible gender identities by defining a polyphonic design language with a diverse range of colors, textures, forms, symbols, narratives, and so on, as Faye Toogood did in ‘Agender,’ the gender-fluid fashion areas designed for Selfridge’s department stores in London and Manchester last spring.”
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