{"id":4601,"date":"2022-03-30T03:52:12","date_gmt":"2022-03-30T05:52:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.kaunokolegija.lt\/en\/?p=4601"},"modified":"2022-04-01T03:57:00","modified_gmt":"2022-04-01T05:57:00","slug":"kaunas-university-of-applied-sciences-lecturer-designer-m-jankuviene-dedicate-more-effort-to-discovering-yourself-than-fashion","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/archyvas.kaunokolegija.lt\/en\/kaunas-university-of-applied-sciences-lecturer-designer-m-jankuviene-dedicate-more-effort-to-discovering-yourself-than-fashion\/","title":{"rendered":"Kaunas University of Applied Sciences lecturer, designer M. Jankuvien\u0117: dedicate more effort to discovering yourself than fashion"},"content":{"rendered":"
Organized twice a year since 1997, Ukrainian Fashion Week has become the first <\/b>pret-a-porter<\/i><\/b> event in Eastern Europe to fully meet global fashion week standards. Have you transported your collections there for the second time?<\/b><\/p>\n Yes. I went to Kyiv for the first time in September. I presented a collection for which I have created a special pattern of hearts that is repeated in one way or another in many of my models. I then hired the same models to showcase my work on the catwalk in February. According to my former teacher-designer Agn\u0117 Kuzmickait\u0117, Ukrainian Fashion Week is a great start for young designers. Actually, a year ago, when the COVID-19 pandemic was in full swing, I only sent my own clothes to Kyiv \u2013 I didn\u2019t take part in the event. Why did I choose Ukraine? For several reasons. First of all, a high level of fashion has long prevailed here. Secondly, both we and the Ukrainian designers belong to Eastern Europe, so I see a lot of things familiar and understandable to me in their fashion. Thirdly, I know a number of fashion designers who started at that event and later became famous. Among them is A. Kuzmickait\u0117.<\/span><\/p>\n Didn\u2019t you feel the threat of war atmosphere while visiting Kyiv in early February?<\/b><\/p>\n Everything that is happening in Ukraine these days is being watched by our people as if through a magnifying glass. Have you also become dependent on knowledge from there after making a lot of new friends at Fashion Week?<\/b><\/p>\n Really so. While in Kyiv, I made contacts with designers, stylists, photographers, and models in that country, who presented my collection in both September and February. As soon as hostilities broke out in Ukraine, I wrote to everyone. I asked how they were doing, what the real situation was in their country. We have been in contact with everyone so far. Most of my new acquaintances are still in Ukraine. Those who usually live in the capital were scattered into villages, homesteads. There they are trying to wait until the end of the war. They believe the actions of this war will end soon. While the situation was still peaceful, I sent my clothes to a stylist in Kharkiv for a photoshoot. Now they are still there. So I will have to come back again (<\/span>laughs<\/span><\/i>). Do you know the superstition of throwing a coin into the sea again to return there again? That\u2019s my \u201ccoin\u201d left in Kyiv. I hope to get back there as soon as peace prevails. We still keep in touch with the mentioned stylist on a daily basis. I know she spent ten days in a row in the basement because of the bombing. I offered contacts of people from Lithuania who could offer transportation and help her escape. She refused.<\/span><\/p>\n Is it true that Lithuanian celebrities like the clothes you create?<\/b><\/p>\n If they already say so, that\u2019s probably true (<\/span>laughs<\/span><\/i>). I really dressed up a lot of our famous people. I graduated from the Academy of Arts, and currently I am working at Kaunas University of Applied Sciences as a lecturer in Fashion Design. I am the founder and designer of the \u201cMild Power\u201d brand. There are a variety of occasions for which I prepare famous Lithuanian people: photo sessions, public appearances, TV projects, filming. After the pandemic year, I started to create an everyday image as well.<\/span><\/p>\n
<\/a>Milda Jankuvien\u0117, a lecturer and designer at the Faculty of Arts and Education of Kaunas University of Applied Sciences, took part in the Eastern European Fashion Week in Kyiv at the beginning of February, and as soon as she returned, she got the news about the invasion of Ukrainian territory by Russian soldiers. \u201cIt\u2019s hard to believe how fragile things are\u2026 My new Ukrainian friends are now living in a state of survival, not creativity,\u201d the 31-year-old designer hardly finds the right words for the occurring situation.<\/span><\/p>\n
<\/a>Anxious rumors were already spreading in the mass media. I read about the events and in parallel, I was preparing for Fashion Week. After all, I wrote to the organizers of the event to find out about the situation. I asked if it was better, as last year, to send them only the clothes from my collection and refrain from flying to Kyiv. The Kyiv people responded very calmly to my concern. They wrote that they have long been accustomed to the ongoing turmoil in Ukraine: they have been involved in a war with Russia for eight years. They invited me to come and see for myself that it was safe in Kyiv. And it was really quiet then. The people of the fashion world were extremely friendly with each other and did not dramatize situations. In Kyiv, I enjoyed every day. I was proud of myself for not running away and missing such a great opportunity to see others and show my work.<\/span><\/p>\n