Kinderwhore

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Kat Bjelland wearing a kinderwhore outfit in 1992 Kat Bjelland 1992 (crop).jpg
Kat Bjelland wearing a kinderwhore outfit in 1992

Kinderwhore is a fashion style most notably worn by some female grunge and alternative rock musicians in the US during the early to mid-1990s. The style is characterized through the combination of cute, feminine fashion items like babydoll and Peter Pan collared dresses, with more adult aspects like smudged red lipstick and dark eye makeup. It has its origins in the mid-1980s band Pagan Babies, which featured future Babes in Toyland vocalist/guitarist Kat Bjelland and future Hole vocalist/guitarist Courtney Love, who lived together and shared clothes. Following the band's disbandment, the two's subsequent bands achieved significant mainstream success and led to the fashion being popularised amongst the general public and being referenced by high fashion designers including Marc Jacobs.

Contents

Fashion

Kinderwhore fashion is based around a childlike fashion silhouette and accessories in combination with punk fashion's "rips and tears". [1] Common items include torn, ripped tight or low-cut babydoll and Peter-Pan-collared dresses, slips, knee-socks, heavy makeup with dark eyeliner, [2] slip dresses, ripped tights, bleached hair, smudged red lipstick, [1] lingerie, cardigans, [3] barrettes, and leather boots or Mary Jane shoes. [4] [5] [6]

Mish Way described it as "intentionally taking the most constraining parts of the feminine, good-girl aesthetic, inflating them to a cartoon level, and subverting them to kill any ingrained insecurities." [3] She further noted that although the look was very feminine, when its exponents performed onstage they "stood tall and confident, they threw their guitars around like weapons, and screamed out whip-smart feminist lyrics. These women were questioning the cultural importance of typical beauty through costume and the stage." [3] Fashion academic Morna Laing likened the style to a same-sex form of drag by "exaggerating the contradictory demands of ideal femininity; betraying its constructed-ness; subverting it from within". [7]

Interviewed in 1994, Love commented:

I would like to think—in my heart of hearts—that I'm changing some psychosexual aspects of rock music. Not that I'm so desirable. I didn't do the kinder-whore thing because I thought I was so hot. When I see the look used to make one more appealing, it pisses me off. When I started, it was a What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? thing. My angle was irony. [8]

History

Courtney Love helped to popularize the fashion style Courtney Love on stage crop.jpg
Courtney Love helped to popularize the fashion style

In the mid–1980s, musicians Kat Bjelland and Courtney Love shared an apartment together while playing in the band Pagan Babies. [3] During this time, the pair would often borrow one another's clothes. [9] Both are generally credited by publications including i-D , the Guardian and Rolling Stone as inventing the kinderwhore fashion style, however both dispute the other's involvement. [3] [10] [11] In interviews, Love credited the inspiration for the style as coming from KatieJane Garside of Daisy Chainsaw and Christine Amphlett of Divinyls. [12] [13] Furthermore, during this period, many of the style's prominent characteristics such as vintage clothing, velvet and 1970s polyester were cheap and easily accessible. [14] i-D observed that the name "kinderwhore" was coined by Melody Maker journalist Everett True, [3] whereas the Guardian credited the term to Bjelland. [1]

Following the 1987 disbandment of Pagan Babies, Bjelland formed Babes in Toyland and Love formed Hole, and both continued to sport this look. In the 1990s, these groups received significant mainstream success. [15] As early as 1992, the style was beginning to slip into mainstream and high fashion, with Perry Ellis' 1992 Grunge collection, by Marc Jacobs embracing elements of kinderwhore. [3] The Guardian specifically cited the 1994 music video for Hole's song "Miss World" as when "The look went viral." [1] Soon, major fashion magazines like Seventeen and Sassy featured editorials on how to achieve the look. [3]

Legacy

With the rise of the soft grunge fashion trend in the 2010s, kinderwhore received a revived interest. [3] Meadham Kirchhoff's spring/summer 2012 collection was inspired by the style, with its runway show being opened by introducing a group of women dressed as Courtney Love during Hole 1996 Reading Festival performance, [7] with Jeremy Scott's fall/winter 2014 collection and Yves Saint Laurent's Resort 2016 collections also embracing this influence. Furthermore, brand including Urban Outfitters, Forever 21 and Free People began putting an emphasis on many of the items that defined kinderwhore fashion, [3] as did Kanye West and Kim Kardashian's childrenswear collection the Kids Supply. [16] In 2019 designer Batsheva Hay cited Courtney Love's "kinderwhore aesthetic" as inspiration. Hay said Love's look "was so of that time but she was also so ahead of her time". [17]

The style received a minor revival in the early 2020s through videos posted on the video sharing application TikTok and mainstream musicians including Olivia Rodrigo taking influence from its aesthetics for her debut album Sour (2021). [18] The 2020 novel Dead Rock Stars by the English author Guy Mankowski depicts a fictional Kinderwhore band called Cherub, whose lead singer Emma draws from the Kinderwhore aesthetic of 'Hollywood glamour of tiaras and satin dresses... with a twisted, girlish sensibility.' Mankowski added, 'I was influenced by the urge that such artists had to use their body to offer a message, with them making the very most of the textual space that comes with being in a band.' [19]

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Babes in Toyland (band)</span> American rock band, formed 1987

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Katherine Lynne Bjelland is a former American musician. She rose to prominence as the lead singer, guitarist, and songwriter of the alternative rock band Babes in Toyland, which she formed in 1987. She has been noted for her unusual vocal style alternately consisting of shrill screams, whispering, and speaking in tongues, as well as for her guitar playing style, which incorporates "jagged" tones with "psychotic rockabilly rhythms".

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Katastrophy Wife was an American rock band formed by Kat Bjelland and her former husband Glen Mattson in 1998. Bjelland also fronted the punk rock band Babes in Toyland between 1987 and 2001. The band currently consists of Bjelland on lead vocals and guitar and her boyfriend, Adrian Johnson, on drums. The band released two albums, Amusia (2001) and All Kneel (2004). A third album was due for release in 2008, but was later cancelled. In May 2014, a 10th anniversary reissue of All Kneel was released as part of Record Store Day. In 2015 Kat Bjelland joined fellow Babes in Toyland band member Lori Barbero and new bass player, Clara Salyer in a reunion tour.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pagan Babies (band)</span> American rock band

Pagan Babies were an American rock band formed by Kat Bjelland and Courtney Love in 1985. Love had initially conceived the band in Portland, Oregon with Bjelland under the name Sugar Babydoll, and the group was joined by bassist Jennifer Finch upon their relocation to San Francisco. The group would go through several lineup and name changes before recording a four-track demo under the Pagan Babies name with drummer Deirdre Schletter and bassist Janis Tanaka.

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References

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  2. "Kinderwhore grunge fashion guide". Mookychick. 2014.
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  5. "Miss World" music video. dailymotion.
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  7. 1 2 Singer, Olivia. "The Political History of the Babydoll Dress". Another Magazine . Retrieved November 4, 2023.
  8. Fricke, David (December 15, 1994). "Courtney Love: Life Without Kurt". Rolling Stone .
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  10. Clarke, Betty. "Babes in Toyland review – sublime seditious rock". The Guardian . Retrieved November 4, 2023.
  11. Yarm, Mark. "Babes in Toyland Reunite, With a Little Help From a Tech LLC". Rolling Stone . Retrieved November 4, 2023.
  12. Andrews, Charlotte Richardson (February 27, 2013). "Hidden treasures: Daisy Chainsaw – Eleventeen". The Guardian.
  13. Garland, Emma (October 8, 2018). "Searching for Utopia: An Interview with Katie". Vice.
  14. Bright, Kimberly J. "HAPPY BIRTHDAY, BABE IN TOYLAND KAT BJELLAND" . Retrieved November 4, 2023.
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  16. ROSS, MARTHA. "Kanye West and Kim Kardashian revive grunge 'kinderwhore' look for kids clothing line". The Mercury News . Retrieved November 4, 2023.
  17. Schneier, Matthew (February 13, 2019). "Angry Dolls Meet Their Mother". The New York Times. Retrieved July 30, 2019.
  18. "Can Riot Grrrl TikTok Re-Imagine a Flawed Scene?". Billboard . Retrieved November 4, 2023.
  19. "'Six Of The Best': Guy Mankowski". Narc Magazine. Retrieved September 29, 2020.