CULTURE

Inside “The Extraordinary Process,” the Late Architect Zaha Hadid’s Final Exhibit

by Steph Eckardt

_DSC5514HR.jpg
Damian Griffiths

Designers like Iris Van Herpen and Stephen Jones all offered up their take on the future of fashion for “The Extraordinary Process,” the exhibit the late architect Zaha Hadid had been planning before her death, and which is now on display at Maison Mais Non gallery in London.

1Installation view of design by Stephen Jones.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

2Installation view of design by Iris Van Herpen.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

3Installation view of design by Material Intelligence, Krystyna Kozhoma x Zaha Hadid Design.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

4Installation view.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non.

5Installation view of design by Nasir Mazhar.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

6Installation view of design by Nasir Mazhar with set design by Charlie Waterhouse.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

7Installation view of design by XO.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

8Installation view of designs by Design Research Lab.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non.

9Installation view of designs by Zaha Hadid.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

10Installation view of design by Peter Do and BRUTE, “The Extraordinary Process.”

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

11Installation view of designs by Design Research Lab.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non.

12Installation view of Minimaforms (Theodore and Stephen Spyropoulos), “Emotive City (2015-).”

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non.

13Installation view of design by Patrik Schumacher.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non

14Installation view of design by Phoebe English.

Damian Griffiths, courtesy of Maison Mais Non