Alice Pollock

Last updated

Alice Pollock (born 1942) [1] is a British fashion designer and retailer who founded the boutique Quorum, which featured the work of fellow designers Ossie Clark and Celia Birtwell, and later started the male modelling agency English Boy in London.

Contents

Quorum

Pollock founded Quorum in 1964 with the textile designer Celia Birtwell. [2] Her first backer was the theatre producer Michael White, whose wife, the former model Sarah Hillsdon, [3] designed for Quorum until her pregnancy. [4] It was Pollock's second backer, a stockbroker called Michael Armitage, who introduced her to Ossie Clark at his RCA show. This led to the Clark/Pollock design partnership at Quorum [4] where the fashion become more subtle, as the mini was replaced by the midi and maxi hemlines.

Clark has been credited with opening the Quorum boutique with Pollock and he was designing clothes whilst he was still at the Royal College of Art. [5]

Quorum provided a shop window for the work of many young designers, and began featuring Clark's work in 1965. [1] [6] Other Quorum designers included Michael Rainey (before he launched his own boutique Hung On You in winter 1965), [7] Sheridan Barnett, who later launched label Barnett and Brown with Sheilagh Brown [8] and the textile designer Frances Ronaldson, who went on to marry Pollock's ex-husband, Nick Pollock. [9] Pollock designed for the label into the 1970s. She and Clark parted ways in 1973 [1] and Clark and Birtwell's marriage ended the following year. [5]

Quorum's fashion shows were known for their opulence and were popular with celebrities including the Beatles and David Hockney. [2] Radley Gowns purchased the boutique in 1969. [1] [5]

English Boy

In 1966, Pollock and Sir Mark Palmer founded the early male modelling agency English Boy in Chelsea, London, with Palmer as manager. [10] [11] Palmer declared that the agency's aim was "to change the image of British manhood and put the boy, as opposed to the girl, on the magazine cover in the future." [10]

The agency was initially run by Jose Maria Fonseca before she joined forces with April Ducksbury to found their own successful agency, Models 1, in 1968. [9] [12]

Related Research Articles

Ossie Clark English fashion designer

Raymond "Ossie" Clark was an English fashion designer who was a major figure in the Swinging Sixties scene in London and the fashion industry in that era. Clark is now renowned for his vintage designs by present-day designers.

Manolo Blahnik Spanish fashion designer

Manuel "Manolo" Blahnik Rodríguez is a Spanish fashion designer and founder of the eponymous high-end shoe brand.

Celia Birtwell, CBE, is a British textile designer and fashion designer, known for her distinctive bold, romantic and feminine designs, which are influenced by Picasso and Matisse, and the classical world. She was well known for her prints which epitomised the 1960s/70s. After a period away from the limelight, she returned to fashion in the early 21st century.

Talitha Getty Dutch actress

Talitha Dina Getty was a Dutch actress, socialite, and model who was regarded as a style icon of the late 1960s. She lived much of her adult life in Britain and, in her final years, was closely associated with the Moroccan city of Marrakesh. Her husband was the oil heir and subsequent philanthropist John Paul Getty Jr.

<i>Mr and Mrs Clark and Percy</i> 1971 painting by David Hockney

Mr and Mrs Clark and Percy is a painting by the British artist David Hockney. Painted between 1970 and 1971, it depicts the fashion designer Ossie Clark and the textile designer Celia Birtwell in their flat in Notting Hill Gate shortly after their wedding, with one of the couple's cats on Clark's knee. The white cat depicted in the painting was Blanche; Percy was another of their cats, but Hockney thought "Percy" made a better title.

Alfred Radley was a British clothing manufacturer best known for founding Radley Fashions and his association with the Quorum Boutique and fashion designer, Ossie Clark.

Betty Jackson, is an English fashion designer based in London, England. She was born in Lancashire. In 2007, her success in British fashion was recognised with first an MBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours 1987 and later with a CBE for "services to the fashion industry." She is also known for designing many of the outrageous costumes worn by Edina and Patsy on the 1990s hit television comedy Absolutely Fabulous.

Jim Lee (photographer)

Jim Lee is a London-based photographer and film director. A fashion photographer for magazines during the late sixties and seventies, he worked closely with Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour in London and New York on fashion and advertising shoots. He switched to film directing in the late seventies, creating hundreds of television commercials as well as working on several full-length feature films. His earlier photographs form part of the permanent collection at the Victoria and Albert Museum, with additional photographs in the archives of The Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow. A book of his life's work entitled Jim Lee / Arrested was launched in May 2012 alongside an exhibition of photographs from the book at Somerset House, London. Lee's work is regularly exhibited at art galleries around the world, and he continues to collaborate on imaginative campaigns, in addition to developing his own creative projects. In September 2015, Lee's autobiographical book LIFE IN B&W was released by Quartet at the Groucho Club in London. In 2016, Lee was a speaker at the Oxford Literary Festival, where he was also interviewed by writer Paul Blezard. In October 2018, Lee's latest book, The BOX, was published by The Box Book Company. In 2019, Lee published My BOX, a version of The BOX for children between the ages of 8-15 years.

Mr Freedom was a clothing boutique in London which sold "pop punk" fashion by a number of young designers commissioned by the owner, Tommy Roberts, the designer who defined the look of Swinging London and his partner, Trevor Myles. Celebrities such as Freddie Mercury and Didi Kempot wore designs from the shop which was at 430 King's Road in Chelsea, London from 1969–70 and then at 20 Kensington Church Street in Kensington 1945.

Graziella Fontana is a Genoese Italian fashion designer who was active in the London Mod fashion scene in the 1960s and early 1970s. One of her designs, a hotpants suit in check Liberty cotton, was chosen as the Dress of the Year in 1971.

Hung On You

Hung On You was a London fashion boutique, run by the designer Michael Rainey, particularly known for flowery shirts and kipper ties in bold colours. Rainey's customers included the Rolling Stones, The Beatles, The Kinks and the actor Terence Stamp.

Kiki Byrne

Kiki Byrne was a Norwegian-born, London-based fashion designer who is mainly remembered as Mary Quant's rival on the King's Road in the late 1950s and 1960s.

Sheridan Barnett is a British former fashion designer who worked with London boutique Quorum and launched the brand Barnett and Brown with Sheilagh Brown during the late 1970s. He went on to combine own-brand design with freelance work for names such as Jaeger, Norman Hartnell and Reldan, also working as a university academic. Barnett won Bath Museum of Costume's Dress of the Year award in 1983.

Christopher McDonnell is a British fashion designer who operated in the UK between the 1960s and 1980s. In the US, he was known under his own name, and in the UK he operated under the brand name Marrian-McDonnell before switching to an eponymous label in 1973.

Stirling Cooper was a London-based fashion wholesaler and retailer that, along with brands such as Biba, Quorum, Browns and Clobber, helped to redefine UK fashion in the late 1960s.

Prudence Glynn

Prudence Glynn, Baroness Windlesham (1935–1986) was a British fashion journalist and author, best known for her long-running role as the first fashion editor of The Times.

Sheilagh Brown is a British fashion designer who began her career in the 1960s, as part of the Swinging London scene. She was among the designers for Stirling Cooper, working subsequently at Coopers and Quorum, before establishing the label Barnett and Brown with Sheridan Barnett.

<i>A Bigger Splash</i> (1973 film) 1973/1974 film about David Hockney

A Bigger Splash is a 1973 British biographical documentary film about David Hockney's lingering breakup with his then-partner Peter Schlesinger, from 1970 to 1973. Directed by Jack Hazan and edited by David Mingay, it has music by Patrick Gowers. Featuring many of Hockney's circle, it includes designers Celia Birtwell and Ossie Clark, artist Patrick Procktor, gallery owner John Kasmin and museum curator Henry Geldzahler.

Emmanuelle Khanh was a French fashion designer, stylist and model. She was particularly known for her distinctive outsize eyewear, and was considered one of the leading young designers of the 1960s New Wave movement in France.

Kellie Wilson was an American model who worked in the 1960s and early 1970s.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Pollock, Alice". Vintage Fashion Guild. 28 July 2010. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  2. 1 2 Mark Armstrong (10 May 2014). Swinging Britain: Fashion in the 1960s. Shire Publications. p. 61. ISBN   978-0-7478-1499-3.
  3. Kennaway, Guy (5 October 2008). "Michael White's celebrity photo album". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  4. 1 2 Watt, Judith (2005). Ossie Clark, 196574 (1. paperback ed.). London: V&A Publ. p. 53. ISBN   9781851774586.
  5. 1 2 3 "Ossie Clark - Obituary". Daily Telegraph. 19 August 2014. Archived from the original on 11 August 2010. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  6. "Ossie Clark: The Early Years". V&A. Victoria and Albert Museum. Retrieved 4 August 2014.
  7. Julian Palacios (2010). Syd Barrett & Pink Floyd: Dark Globe. Plexus. p. 114. ISBN   978-0-85965-431-9.
  8. Almond, Kevin; Mallett, Daryl F. "Barnett, Sheridan". Fashion Encyclopedia. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  9. 1 2 Watt, Judith (2005). Ossie Clark, 196574 (1. paperback ed.). London: V&A Publ. pp. 58–59. ISBN   9781851774586.
  10. 1 2 Chris Salewicz (1 August 2012). 27: Brian Jones. Quercus Publishing. p. 30. ISBN   978-1-78087-542-2.
  11. Christoph Grunenberg; Jonathan Harris; Jonathan P. Harris (1 January 2005). Summer of Love: Psychedelic Art, Social Crisis and Counterculture in the 1960s. Liverpool University Press. p. 1982. ISBN   978-0-85323-929-1.
  12. Comerford, Cathy (23 January 1999). "Slice of Sixties sells for pounds 10m" . The Independent. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014. Retrieved 4 August 2014.