Eckhaus Latta | |
Founder: | Zoe Latta Mike Eckhaus |
Key People: | Zoe Latta (Co-Founder, Co-Designer) Mike Eckhaus (Co-Founder, Co-Designer) |
Industry: | Fashion |
Location City: | Los Angeles New York City |
Location Country: | U.S.A. |
Locations: | 2 Permanent Locations (Los Angeles, CA) 2016-present (New York, NY) 2018-present 1 Temporary Location (Whitney Museum, NY) Aug 3–Oct 8, 2018 |
Eckhaus Latta is an American fashion brand with locations in Los Angeles and New York City.
The brand is known for their use of unexpected materials, exploring texture and tactility in their designs, and for incorporating writing, performance, and video into their practice.[1] In 2018, Eckhaus Latta opened a show, Possessed, at the Whitney Museum, the first fashion-related exhibition at the museum in 21 years.[2] The label previously exhibited their work, a sculptural collage of fashion, fine art, and video, in group shows at the Hammer Museum, (2016) and MoMA PS1, (2015).[3] [4] Additionally, Eckhaus Latta was nominated for the 2018 Edition of the LVMH Prize.[5]
The label was founded in 2011 by Mike Eckhaus and Zoe Latta. The two designers met as students at the Rhode Island School of Design, where Mike studied sculpture and Zoe textiles. In 2010, Eckhaus moved to NYC and began working as an accessories designer at Marc by Marc Jacobs while Latta ran a textiles business, Ruth Prince, selling prints to designers such as Calvin Klein and Proenza Schouler while designing knits for Opening Ceremony.[6] Looking to move beyond the somewhat restricted commercial environments in which they worked, Eckhaus and Latta decided to design a collection together.
Eckhaus Latta periodically collaborates with those they find inspiring, from putting artists' sculptures into their store, to commissioning the furniture in their Los Angeles retail store, to working with Camper on a line of footwear.[7] Eckhaus Latta amplifies their peers and engages in a spectrum of collaborations.[8]
Collaborators | |
---|---|
Brian Chippendale | |
Susan Cianciolo | |
Alexa Karolinski | |
Emma T. Price | |
Jay Latta | |
Annabeth Marks | |
Jessi Reaves | |
Sophie Stone | |
Erica Sarlo | |
Nora Jane Slade | |
Camper | |
Eric Wrenn | |
Rachel Chandler | |
Dev Hynes | |
Alex Da Corte | |
Brendan Fowler | |
Valerie Keane | |
Martine Syms | |
Torey Thornton | |
Amy Yao | |
Riley O'Neill | |
Avena Venus Gallagher | |
Charlotte Wales |
Eckhaus Latta often uses non-professional or unconventional models in their advertising campaigns and runway shows.[9] [10] The label courted controversy with its first large-scale ad campaign when it showed adult models having unsimulated sex in the Spring 2017 collection.[11]
Unconventional Model | Profession | |
---|---|---|
Chef | ||
Artist | ||
Thistle Brown | Stylist | |
Alex Chaves | Artist | |
Photographer | ||
Barbara Ferris | Actress | |
Camille Bidault-Waddington | Stylist | |
Annabeth Marks | Artist | |
Coco Gordon Moore | Artist | |
Artist | ||
Sophie Stone | Artist | |
Artist/DJ | ||
Writer | ||
Actress | ||
Musician | ||
Musician | ||
Thea Wagner | Art Collector | |
Gallerist | ||
Musician | ||
Musician | ||
Torey Thornton | Artist | |
Musician | ||
Artist | ||
Skateboarder | ||
Raphael Cohen | Artist | |
Lucy Chadwick | Gallerist | |
Cynthia Leung | Publicist | |
Publicist |