Iordanes Spyridon Gogos Australia Resort 2025

Elaine George, the first-ever First Nations model to appear on the cover of Vogue Australia, opened the Iordanos Spyridon Gogos resort show, walking dramatically down the runway in a sleeveless dress pieced together from rectangular pieces of fabric in various shades of goldenrod, some of them heavily embellished. The reaction from the crowd was audibly joyous.

It was a fitting introduction to Jordan Gogosā€™s latest collection, which was anchored in many icons of Australian fashion. Among them is Akira Isogawa, a frequent collaborator of Gogosā€™s known for exquisite embroidery rendered in both subtle and maximalist ways. Here that included a layered chiffon gown embroidered with a note written by Gogosā€™s grandfather, who the brand is named after. ā€œI found my Pappouā€™s lotto numbers in a Greek cookbook, and Akira beaded them,ā€ he explained in his studio the day before his show. ā€œHe was always like, ā€˜If I win the lottery, Iā€™ll buy you this; because when you are Greek and in a suburban household a lot of your relationships are about the things they want to give you. He kept the same numbers his whole life.ā€

Gogos also joined forces with Jenny Banister, recreating a series of her ā€œpunkā€ dresses from the 1970s, one of which was made from geometric pieces of fabric held together by zip ties. And because you ā€œcanā€™t research Jenny without Linda,ā€ as he put it, he dove into Linda Jacksonā€™s archives, unearthing the designerā€™s treasures in the process; most notably a box of her brand labels, which he sewed one by one into a sleeveless gown with an all-over ruffled trim. A spectacular knee-length dress with dramatic sleeves had individual tiny squares of Jacksonā€™s vintage fabricsā€”floral prints, tribal prints, bold solidsā€”all sewn-on in origami shapes, coming together to create a sort of walking reference library.

Gogosā€™s fashion label is, in effect, an art project. Pieces are one-of-a-kind, labored over individually until he deems them done, and are not for commercial reproduction. He only just recently started selling some of his archival pieces, and is ā€œvery careful,ā€ about who he sells to. ā€œI formally document who has it, where it is, where theyā€™re wearing it.ā€

ā€œMy customers are collectors who usually buy with the intention of donating to an institution one day,ā€ he explained. ā€œThe dynamics of working with Akira, the pieces made from Lindaā€™s archiveā€”these are things that can never be replicated again.ā€ Their value lies beyond the usual parts and labor, but into the history they both resurface and build upon.

The designer is a fiber artist first; his garments are made from patch-worked, top-stitched, embroidered, felted, and otherwise completely manipulated material. A trio of bulky, ā€œhairyā€ multicolor jackets were made from old spools of thread. ā€œWe slice [the spools] up, lay them flat, and compress the fibers down to create patterns,ā€ he explained. ā€œYou canā€™t sew with old thread, itā€™s too fragile, so factories just have boxes full of them.ā€ The jackets have corresponding artworks, which the models carried on the runway, rolled-up on their shoulders.

Elsewhere, an asymmetric tunic dress was made from fabric that was dyed and waxed, then printed with pencil illustrations that gave it a papyrus sort of effect; while a jacket with a ā€œsurrealistā€ look in swirling shades of purples and yellows, and greens and yellows, was achieved through chain stitching a material over and over to create its unique texture. Gogos works on his pieces little by little, and since they often take months to finish, they are in a way, a reflection of his daily changing moods. ā€œEverything is a reflection of how far I can push [a surface or a material] in this given timeframe,ā€ he said. ā€œContext and time and history play such a big role. If I redid the exact piece in six months time it would be totally different, because my life and the context would be totally different.ā€

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