Designer Todd Oldham selects RISD Museum for first major exhibition of his 1990s runway fashions
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, August 14, 2025


Designer Todd Oldham selects RISD Museum for first major exhibition of his 1990s runway fashions
Todd Oldham, Lei Ensemble, Spring 1991. Gift of the Todd Oldham Studio. RISD Museum, Providence, RI.



PROVIDENCE, RI.- The RISD Museum presents All of Everything: Todd Oldham Fashion, the first major exhibition to focus on the exuberant style and playful aesthetic of designer Todd Oldham’s 1990s fashion career. Drawn from the Todd Oldham Studio archives, and including items recently donated to the RISD Museum, All of Everything features more than 65 full ensembles—from Oldham's Swarovski crystal-encrusted feats of craftsmanship to his Pantone non-repeating print designs. The exhibition opens with a free celebration the evening of April 7, 5:30 to 7:30 pm. All of Everything : Todd Oldham Fashion is on view April 8 through September 11, 2016.

“I am most flattered the RISD Museum is celebrating my fashion design days. I had such fun making the clothes and had the great pleasure of working next to amazing artists along the way,” Oldham says. “It was joy to go through the archive to choose and recompile ensembles for the exhibition, and the fact that this exhibition is at one of my very favorite design schools in the world is a special thrill.”

John W. Smith, Director of the RISD Museum, says, “We are honored to celebrate Todd Oldham’s recent gift to the RISD Museum by mounting this major exhibition of his work from the 1990s. Todd’s commitment to innovation, creativity, and craftsmanship reflect the core values of the Rhode Island School of Design and the RISD Museum. We’re particularly thrilled that Todd has been involved in every aspect of this, and visitors can look forward to being astonished not only by the brilliant garments but by Todd’s fabulous exhibition designs.”

In a world where success and expertise are often defined by mastering one genre, Oldham defies expectations. The multi-talented designer burst onto the New York fashion landscape in 1989 and, within a year, was called "more than a designer to watch; he's happening" ( New York Times , 1990). Oldham soon won top honors as a new fashion talent, and was widely lauded as a rising star and runway darling. He blazed a spirited trail throughout the next decade—his fashion week shows are remembered as being as exciting as dance parties and rock concerts, while his designs were praised as inventive and playful, with extravagant embellishments and raucous color combinations.

"We were always throwing curve balls," Oldham recalls. "I felt I had something new to say in this medium that had juxtaposition and duality—not a normal approach to fashion, come to find out.”

In 1999, Oldham shuttered the doors of his fashion house and focused his eye for form, function, and fun in the direction of other creative endeavors. He has mastered nearly every other element of design in the nearly two decades since: furniture, graphic, interior, exhibition, and product—as well as film directing, photography, and book publishing. The bedrock of each of these accomplishments, however, is the creative foundation that he laid in his fashion designs. From the start, Oldham meshed narrative and storytelling with a love for craft; his fixation on novelty has led to the revival of vanishing techniques and traditions, and his innovative bricolage approach earned him an honorary doctorate degree from the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) in May 2014.

While on campus for commencement ceremonies that spring, Oldham toured the RISD Museum and met with Curator of Costume and Textiles Kate Irvin and Associate Curator Laurie Brewer to discuss his recent rediscovery of his runway archives and a proposed gift of items from this collection … and from this conversation, All of Everything was born.

Upon seeing the archive garments up close for the first time, Irvin was struck by their intricacy and craftsmanship. Carefully considered details, such as embroidered motifs applied at a 400-year-old handicraft workshop in India, illustrate the designer's deep interest in all aspects of textile development and the preservation of artisan industries.

"The significance of these runway pieces is rooted in Todd Oldham’s deeply thoughtful approach to making. Each garment sparkles with creativity, providing a window into the ways traditional handmade artisanry contributes to the creation of show-stopping, joyous fashions," she says.

Irvin notes that while the garments debuted on the runway more than 20 years ago, they appear thoroughly contemporary. "These pieces weren't made in the 1990s in response to the trends of the day. Todd pursued personal sources of inspiration that often led to experimental methods of making. He continually pushed the boundaries of traditional manufacture, kicking the machine to meet the challenge of making new and exciting works of art. I am positive that these innovations will feel as fresh in 2016 as they did in the 1990s."










Today's News

April 8, 2016

Hey! Ho! Let's Go: Queens Museum celebrates The Ramones & the birth of Punk

Restored Saint Michael the Archangel by Andrea della Robbia back on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art

New Shakespeare First Folio discovered; To go on display at the Mount Stuart mansion

Austria's Leopold Museum settles long-running feud over Nazi-looted Egon Schiele drawings

Sotheby's to sell the largest Fancy Vivid Pink Pear-shaped diamond ever offered at auction

"Drawing, Dreaming and Desire: Works on Paper by Sam Francis" opens at the Norton Simon Museum

Julien's Auctions Music Icons 2015 features Rock n' Roll royalty in New York

The Boijmans collection website has been revamped: discover the stories behind more than 17,000 works of art

Brice Marden's Star (for Patti Smith) to lead Phillips' Evening Sale of 20th Century and Contemporary Art

Photojournalist Lucien Aigner's archive acquired by Yale University, Addison Gallery

Dürer master engravings & prints from the Belle Époque feature in Swann Galleries' sale

"A Day at the Beach: Nothing to Hide" uncovers the humanity and humor of Sarasota beaches

Designer Todd Oldham selects RISD Museum for first major exhibition of his 1990s runway fashions

Museum uses building façade to showcase rare art

Italian motorcycle legend's collection offered for charity at Bonhams Stafford sale

Texas Landscapes by Gay Gaddis opens at the Curator Gallery

Italy's hatmaker to the stars looks to roots for revival

Poetry in paint: Fine seascapes at Bonhams Greek Art Sale in London

José Esparza Chong Cuy appointed Associate Curator at MCA Chicago

Scientists invent robotic "artist" that spray paints giant murals

Images by Paul Winstanley, depicting the interiors of British art schools, on view at Alan Cristea Gallery

Yoshinori Mizutani is back in Antwerp with a solo exhibition at IBASHO

Science fiction, art, and artifacts from the Paul G. Allen Family Collection on view in Seattle

The Walters appoints Kate Burgin Deputy Director for Museum Advancement




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful