Something for Everyone, Everything for No One
International Library of Fashion Research•May 07, 2025 — Oct 03, 2025
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We’re excited to announce the opening of our new exhibition “Something for Everyone, Everything for No One” by Anna-Sophie Berger and Teak Ramos on Wednesday 7th of May, from 18.00-20.00! At 19.00 there will be an artists talk, moderated by our board member and archive aficionado Geir Haraldseth. Free & open for all. Welcome!
The exhibition “Something for Everyone, Everything for No One” features a series of eponymous works made by artists Anna-Sophie Berger and Teak Ramos from their collaboratively built archive of images, texts and theory about everyday material culture and fashion. Stemming from an ongoing conversation on their shared interests in fashion at-large and technical garment construction, both the archive and the work become a form of research. The exhibition has a somewhat serendipitous focus on the early modern era (Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries) which is amplified in the 1982 MET Museum documentary The...More
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Something for Everyone, Everything for No One
International Library of Fashion Research•May 07, 2025 — Oct 03, 2025
Press Release
We’re excited to announce the opening of our new exhibition “Something for Everyone, Everything for No One” by Anna-Sophie Berger and Teak Ramos on Wednesday 7th of May, from 18.00-20.00! At 19.00 there will be an artists talk, moderated by our board member and archive aficionado Geir Haraldseth. Free & open for all. Welcome!
The exhibition “Something for Everyone, Everything for No One” features a series of eponymous works made by artists Anna-Sophie Berger and Teak Ramos from their collaboratively built archive of images, texts and theory about everyday material culture and fashion. Stemming from an ongoing conversation on their shared interests in fashion at-large and technical garment construction, both the archive and the work become a form of research. The exhibition has a somewhat serendipitous focus on the early modern era (Sixteenth through Eighteenth Centuries) which is amplified in the 1982 MET Museum documentary The...More