21st Century Rag Pickers
The Ecological
Geishaning
Through the London queer scene, I found the playful,
idiotic, waste-eating movement correctly and incorrectly referred to as “Geish”.The Geish Manifesto, written by performance artist and Geish creature, Princess
Pathojen, loosely recounts the entomology of Geish; from a sector of
Geishas who were strictly men dressed as women, later reaching western drag
communities who dropped the “a”, continuing to refer to their
dress/fantasy/costume/decoration/adornment as just “Geish” (Pathojen, 2023).
Since Pathojen’s entry to the London Queer scene post-pandemic, “Geish” has
evolved as the term for fanciful, playful, stupid, garbage-centric, loosely
constructed, cheap, found-object, messy, maximalist, trinket-core, poorly
hand-crafted fashion/styling assemblage (the two are inseparable in reference
to Geish). I asked Pathojen if they thought Geish was inherently ecological, to
which he said no, her first encounter with the term was from, ‘super cunty
dolls (trans women) who were using this word to just describe their clothes,’
which were designer – not mindfully sourced or anti-capitalist by any nature,
but not ‘any less Geish,’ (Pathojen, 2023).
Pathojen’s Geish, however, is waste-minded, dependant on a
scavenging-making-remaking process; his Geish is a Divine Craft.
f.19-20 Princess Pathojen (2023) via
@cultofshane
Though Geish has a long legacy outside of Pathojen’s
practice, we both witnessed their drastic influence within the London Queer
community, through performance, publications, and consistent active engagement
in raves/parties, changing “Geish”s definition locally to meaning ecological,
handmade, scavenged ensembles. The more trash-Geish queer people go to a rave,
the more queer people see it, see how achievable it is and return in their own head
to toe trash-Geish. The “cuntification” of the hand-made, the truly
waste-centric, encouraged the community to stop buying frivolously and instead
start hoarding trash to make with. In 2023, designer is seen as almost
embarrassing within the Geishified queer scene (Pathojen, 2023). The movement
has escalated because the queer scene thinks itself as “left wing”, although this
often fails to manifest socially, it does create receptivity to ecological response-ability.
The scene refused to continue classist, capitalist-centric hierarchies around
wealth, and purchase-ability, instead giving praise to creativity and
resourcefulness.
f.21-23 Aje’s Geish (2023) via
@ara.ata_
Trash-Geish is enriched by its capacity to fall apart
and be remade, it is always in fluctuation between safety pins, and thus is
rarely made *well enough* to be purchasable within mainstream audiences.
Regardless, some practitioners, Pathojen included, do sell trash-Geish. Upon my
asking about this, Pathojen said, ‘buying my Geish? Yes. Buying Geish? No.’
expressing his need to commodify their practice to make rent, though believing Geish
looks are best achieved when items are found, crafted with, and assembled into
looks by they who wear it. Geish is transferrable between people as Geish is
affected by the mood, walk, expression of the person wearing it, therefore one
person’s Geish can never be another’s – it become their fantasy in their
individual construction. Regardless, purchasing it reduces the process of assemblage,
making the clothing less intimate, less intrinsic to one’s character. It
reduces Geish to a bought identity, thus reenforcing identity commodities,
rather than a spiritual intersection of the communal and the individual through
the styling of found objects. It eradicated the planetary connection and the
muscular effort of making; it kills its soul. The mobilisation of Geish as a Divine
Craft has been through its observable nature – that it appears accessible,
plus the attraction of queer/punk subversion from mainstream fashion. The audience
also broadened through essential subculture photographers and zine-makers such
as Mia Evans, Max Auberon, Rae Tait, Heloise Darcie.
f.24 Keelan and Ellie at ‘r
u a goff’ (2023) by Mia Evans via @ahgeewiz
f.25 Zena
for the Geish Manifesto (2023) by Mia Evans via @ahgeewiz
f.26,27 Cloud (2023) by Max Auberon
Pathojen hopes for a trash-Geish world, where all
adornment in and outside fashion is praise to garbage. I draw parallels between
her ideology and the work of William Morris, a maker and writer of the post-industrialisation
arts and crafts movement, heavily influential within Britain and then-adjacent
colonies. Morris believed beauty to be a necessity for wellbeing, for the
collector of beautiful things, but more so for the producer; to Morris, the
only ‘real art is the expression by man of his pleasure in labour,’ (Morris,
1879, via William Morris Gallery, 2023). The arts and crafts movement Morris
spoke for was one of artisanship, in which refinement of skill was a joyful, meditative
task for the practitioner, their knowledge is considered valuable, important to
be maintained through generational teachings (Morris, 1888).
Though fundamentally similar as anti-mass production, trash-Geish
diverges from artisanship in its focus on play (Darcie, 2022, p.9-10).
Perfection is unknowable in trash-Geish, skills are not to be taught with
divine clarity, but loosely, (if taught at all) the movement relishes in
experimentation. There is no mistake or misstep in constructing trash-Geish
because doesn’t try to make purely
beautiful objects; ugliness, campness, is a common motif. Morris had a strong
sense of binary division between the ugly and the beautiful, untransferable to
the anti-binary practice of Geish (Starting Out, 2023). Though both
despise the uniformity and reduced decadence in industrialised, mass-produced
goods, for Morris this is in material, and for Geish people this is in idea.
The material residue of industrialisation is prime material for the Geishaning,
though its discarding, dirtying, metamorphosis from purchasable to scavenged
item through the act of disposal, it becomes beautiful, ugly, camp, Geish
(Soucie, 2023). Unlike Morris’s arts and crafts movement, as people crafting
divinely, and only taking from abundance materials, our task is not to make
more beautiful, decadent and richer things, but to make ugly, mass produced,
detritus beautiful and soulful; embedded with play, care, and joy.