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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Baillie Walsh and The Art of Immersive Experiences

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Fashion & Beauty, Business, Arts

4.6770 Ratings

🗓️ 10 February 2023

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The film director joins BoF editor-at-large Tim Blanks to discuss how he uses his fashion and music roots to stage powerful experiences including from Abba Voyage and recent Dior Men and Fendi Couture shows. 


Background: 

Film and creative director Bailie Walsh cut his teeth working in London during the nineties and early aughts alongside talents like Boy George, Leigh Bowery and Alexander McQueen. While Walsh calls himself a film director, editor-at-large Tim Blanks, who hosts him on the latest BoF Podcast, describes him as more of a magician. He was behind the hologram of Kate Moss featured in McQueen’s show “Widows of Culloden” in 2006 that went on to be showcased in both London’s V&A Museum and New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. More recently, he’s captivated audiences with his immersive virtual concert, Abba Voyage, in London, and his work with Kim Jones, who tapped Walsh to help stage Dior Menswear and Fendi Couture shows in January. Walsh approaches his projects with the goal of completely immersing his audience — and often pushes the limits to do so. 

“What I love about being creative or having the opportunity to be creative is a challenge,” said Walsh. 


Key Insights

  • Walsh helped infuse Dior Menswear Fall/Winter 2023 runway with TS Eliot’s poem “The Waste Land.” Models drifted past massive screens featuring Gwendoline Christie and Robert Pattinson reading the poem, spliced with music from composer Max Richter. 
  • Creatives need to live on the edge of fear, according to Walsh. “You have to be scared if you’re a creative person … you’re entering into a journey that you haven’t before,” he said. “That’s the point of doing it.” 
  • Music has been a thread throughout Walsh’s career. He’s made videos for Boy George, crafted Abba’s hologram-filled Voyage concert but also used music as a source of inspiration for his Daniel Craig-fronted film “Flashbacks of a Fool.”
  • Walsh spent over two years thinking about how to play with illusion and reality to create Abba Voyage. Throughout the display, there are costume changes, chatter between the artists and shadowy figures still present when the lights are out. Then, there’s a moment the group suddenly disappears — a reminder the show was contrived. 


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, this is Imran Ahmed, founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion.

0:08.2

Welcome to the Bof podcast.

0:10.6

It's Friday, February 10th.

0:12.7

Deep roots in fashion and music have helped the self-described film director, Bailey Walsh,

0:17.9

stage powerful experiences from Abba Voyage to Kim Jones's recent shows for Dior Men

0:23.5

and Fendi Couture. This week on the BOF podcast, our editor at large sits down with Bailey

0:29.6

Walsh to understand his creative process and how he first started collaborating with Kim

0:34.9

Jones. Fashion is embedded in Bailey Walsh's life and work, but so is music.

0:39.7

As Tim says, he was formed in the London Crucible that gave the world boy George,

0:45.3

Lee Bowery, and Alexander McQueen, and he worked closely with them all.

0:50.5

So here's Bailey Walsh with Tim Blanks on the B-O-F podcast.

0:56.3

Today we're sitting with Bailey Walsh, who calls himself a filmmaker, but I call him a miracle worker.

1:04.5

He's known to the world for so many iconic moments in pop culture and in fashion, and now he is the mastermind behind

1:14.5

Abba Voyage, which is stunning audiences over the head and dragging them comatose out of the

1:21.5

theatre with wonder on a regular basis in East London. Bailey, you've just got back from Paris

1:27.2

where you mounted two

1:29.5

spectaculars for Kim Jones, first for Diehlmen and second for Fendi Couture. So let's talk about

1:38.1

those, shall we? Okay. What can I say? Kim asked me, he saw Abba. I've known Kim for a long time, not well, from a distance,

1:46.4

many mutual friends. I love what he's doing. I think he's growing every time I see another

1:52.7

collection. And he saw Abba Voyage and said, right now, you know, great, would you love to do something?

2:00.2

And I said, yes, I'd love to so kim's very

2:03.8

clear when he comes to you he has strong ideas which is great so okay how can i make that work

...

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