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Kuvateksti

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Mortal Body

Kuvaus

Life offers the sanctuary of a singular physical form, yet its inherent fragility dictates an inevitable trajectory toward dissolution. In death, the body undergoes a profound ontological reconfiguration: stripped of its subjectivity, it is transformed into an object—the corpse. Fashion serves as a complex cultural apparatus that navigates this existential tension and our relationship with mortality.

Dress can obscure the visceral reality of our biological decay, enabling the wearer to inhabit a perpetual present in which the visible markers of aging are masked by cycles of aesthetic renewal. Yet fashion’s relationship with the grave is not solely one of avoidance. While the corpse remains a site of profound cultural anxiety, it also exerts a magnetic, morbid seduction upon the creative imagination.

Artists and designers frequently exploit this fascination, elevating the material signifiers of death (the skull, the skeleton) or instruments of its memorialization (hair, photographs) into fetishized icons of glamour. In this context, the macabre is not a source of horror but, rather, a potent aesthetic tool used to challenge the boundaries of beauty. Ultimately, fashion serves as the definitive memento mori, acting as both a distraction from inevitable biological decline and as a constant reminder of our shared destiny.  

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