Palomino, E., Freilich, O., Raine, I. (2021) 'A virtual Ainu fish skin workshop during Covid 19'. Global Fashion conference. Academy of Fine Arts of Warsaw. ISBN: 978-989-54263-2-4

From April to June 2020, during the Covid-19 isolation, Ran Graber, a third-year student
of Shenkar University, Tel Aviv, elected to study and remake a 19th century fish skin attush
(Ainu robe), under the guidance of Elisa Palomino, Orit Freilich, Ran Kassas and Debbie
Elhayeni, as part of the F4*3D course. This small project of individuals – one student, one
course, one study, one sample – nevertheless brought together workwear and artwear utilitarianism and spirituality, ancient tradition/history, contemporary society, and future
thinking. It bought together Tel Aviv, London, and Hokkaido – as well as all of you here
now, from across the globe.
By disseminating the ancient Indigenous Ainu fish skin craft – as exemplified in this
robe – to a non-Indigenous student, we were able not only to provide an example of
an environmentally sustainable alternative material for fashion, but also, in so doing,
to suggest a way of preventing marine pollution by exploiting skins discarded by the
food industry that would otherwise be thrown in the sea. We were able to sustain
an endangered historic tradition, to bring it to a new arena, and to plant the seeds
of its further dissemination as the fashion students graduate and become industry
professionals across the world.
The paper is centred on the research questions:
‘How can we assist fashion students in developing sustainable materials by sharing
traditional fish skin craft from Ainu Indigenous Peoples?’
‘How can a faculty provide creative new ways of teaching that benefit both staff and
students during difficult times?’

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