Just months into its first academic year at Arizona State University, the newly established fashion degree program is already looking like a powerhouse for fashion education.
Unfolding since August 2017 in ASU Herberger Institute’s School of Art, the program offers a kaleidoscopic range of topics and experiences that has been drawing students from an array of disciplines to the newly renovated Fashion Studio on ASU’s Tempe campus.
“We are putting together a program that is responsive to today’s changing fashion industry,” said Dennita Sewell, professor of practice and curator of fashion design at Phoenix Art Museum, at a benefactor event for the Arizona Costume Institute (ACI) in March. “The industrial sewing equipment in the studio will help students learn to work in an industry level setting that will prepare them for jobs.” The event included a Q&A talkback between Sewell and designer-to-the-stars Zang Toi, who was a special guest for the ACI event.
The New York-based dressmaker — who counts Sharon Stone, Melinda Gates and Patti LaBelle among his famous clients — shared his enthusiasm for ASU’s new fashion program and the innovative work he saw in the program’s Fashion Technology class.
“I think there is room for everything in fashion,” Toi said of the unique student creations in wearable tech. “I think functional fashion will be great for people who really need it and it will be great for those who have the mindset to create it — really brilliant.”
ASU’s Fashion Technology course with assistant professor Galina Mihaleva is a mixed-media class where dresses and drones sometimes meet. Since the beginning of the spring 2018 semester, Mihaleva and her students have been working on designs inspired by nature and the environment — areas she says are in need of attention as we trend toward healthier and sustainable lifestyles.