Item 2020.44 - Vexed Generation Crime and Disorder Slash Neck Hooded Top

Identity area

Reference code

2020.44

Title

Vexed Generation Crime and Disorder Slash Neck Hooded Top

Date(s)

  • 1998-1999 (Creation)

Level of description

Item

Extent and medium

1

Context area

Name of creator

(1994-2007 Revived 2018)

Administrative history

Vexed Generation was founded in 1994 by Joe Hunter (b. 1967) and Adam Thorpe (b. 1969) in response to the British government’s proposed Criminal Justice and Public Order Act. In 1995 they opened a retail store at 12 Newburgh Street, Soho, London. The initial store installation created an unsettling retail environment, with whited-out windows, gravel white marble chippings as flooring, CCTV cameras and no visible staff. Clothing was hung within a large glass box, accessible only through hand-sized holes similar to those found in incubation chambers. The walls featured statistics such as ‘Asthma kills 2,000 children and adults a year in the UK’. In December 1996 they relocated to the first floor of 3 Berwick Street, London. The new shop featured a yellow sun filter on the windows, a blue-tinted light box mounted on the ceiling and bright green walls. The garments were suspended from the walls via ‘breathing lungs’, which were inflatables inserted into the garments to give them shape.

Vexed Generation were early adopters of the internet as a platform for disseminating their work and challenging ideas about fashion communication and marketing; for example, if visitors did not first read the designer’s manifesto before viewing the garments, their website automatically locked them out for twenty-four hours. In 1994 the company introduced the Vexed one-strap bag which was later produced under licence by the American bag company Yak Pak. In 1998 Vexed Generation launched a second label, Crusader 21, that was focused on performance utility-wear. The name was inspired by the British Army, which pioneered a three-layer uniform system capable of withstanding extreme weather and environmental conditions. They launched VexeDenim in 1998 and were among the first fashion brands to use DuPont Teflon fabric protector on denim. Vexed Generation partnered with PUMA in 2003 to design two clothing ranges drawing on their technical and functional aesthetic. Vexed Generation was voluntarily wound up in 2007, and Vexed Design was founded later that year to carry on the designers’ socially responsive ethos through collaboration and consultation with several household names. In 2018, in conjunction with Byronesque and online retailer FARFETCH, the label reissued eleven designs from their past collections.
Sources: Business Wire; Design Week; Drapers; Independent on Sunday; Menswear; Sydney Morning Herald; The Guardian; The Independent; WWD.

Archival history

Immediate source of acquisition or transfer

Content and structure area

Scope and content

Black cotton long-sleeved top with hood which can also be worn as a neck piece. The hood is printed in white lettering with a section of the 1998 Crime and Disorder Act.

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling

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      Physical characteristics and technical requirements

      Label: VEXED GENERATION / Made in England / +44 171 831 6009 http: // wwww.vexed.co.uk
      Condition 11 February 2022: Do not put on a mannequin. Small tear to the left neck binding, 14cm vertical tear to the right back shoulder seam and down into the body, 10cm curved tear to the upper sleeve and shoulder seam.

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      Note

      Printed onto the hood:
      Crime and Disorder Act 1998 (c. 37)
      "(4A) This section also confers on any constable in uniform power-
      (a) to require any person to remove any item which the constable reasonably believes that person is wearing wholly or mainly for the purpose of concealing his identity;
      (b) to seize any item which the constable reasonably believes any person intends to wear wholly or mainly for that purpose."

      Note

      This top was bought from the Vexed Generation shop which was upstairs in a building in Berwick Street in London's Soho. The previous owner of the top was a friend of one of the shop staff.

      Note

      Undercover exhibition label:

      CRIME AND DISORDER HOODED TOP
      Vexed Generation
      1998
      A jersey face mask is attached to the back neck of this top, allowing the wearer to cover their face if needed. It is printed with a section of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998, which confers on any constable in uniform power – (a) to require any person to remove any item which the constable reasonably believes that person is wearing wholly or mainly for the purpose of concealing his identity.
      Cotton
      Archive No. 2020.44

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