Vancouver Magazine
Now Open: The Sourdough Savants at Tall Shadow Have an East Van Bakery Now
The Best Thing I Ate All Week: Beaucoup Bakery’s Pistachio Raspberry Cake
Live Spot Prawns Are Only Here for a Month—and You Can Try Them at This Festival
Succession Is Over: Now It’s Time To Watch the Greatest Show About Wine Ever Made
Our 2023 Sommelier of the Year Franco Michienzi of Elisa Steakhouse Shares His Top Wine Picks
We’ve Scored a Major Discount for VanMag Readers at the Best Wine Festival in Town
5 Things to Do in Vancouver This Week (June 5-11)
Meet OneSpace, the East Vancouver Co-working Space That Offers On-site Childcare
What You Missed at the VMO 2022/23 Season Finale Concert
Wellness in Whistler-Your Ultimate Early Summer Retreat
Local Summer Getaway: 3 Beautiful Okanagan Farm Tours
Local Summer Getaway: Golfing at Alberta’s Crowsnest Pass
Review: Vancouver-Based Denim Brand Duer Is Making Wide-Legged Jeans You Can Hem Yourself
The Latest in Cutting-Edge Kitchen Appliances
7 Spring-y Shopping Picks, From a Lightweight Jacket to a Fresh Face Cleanser
Local designer Evan Clayton’s Inferno is not your average runway show.
“From a fashion perspective, costume is a dirty word,” says local designer Evan Clayton. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Clayton says he was more focused on the commerciality of his pieces. But in the last two years, he’s embraced making clothes that are joyfully outrageous.
This Saturday, September 24, is Clayton’s first solo show in several years. It’s called Inferno for the 14th-century Dante Alighieri poem—but don’t expect old-fashioned, well, fashion. “Think Dante’s Inferno meets Final Fantasy meets The Muppets,” says Clayton. The show stars local drag queens and trans performers, including Kendall Gender, Gia Metric, Jane Smoker, Isabella, Patch, Berlin and Venus.
Instead of fixating on the potential marketability of the garments, Clayton is fully focused on fun. “All of the pieces are costume, basically—there is hardly anything wearable,” he says with a laugh. The designer shares he’s always felt like a bit of an outsider in the fashion industry, creating pieces that walk the line between “fashion” and “costume.” “I’m building out this niche I have, melding the two—but I also think that there are a lot of great figures in fashion that approached their design in the same way,” says Clayton, naming Thierry Mugler and Alexander McQueen: “those weren’t fashion shows, they were drag shows!”
Inferno is taking place at the Vancouver Art Gallery, and it’s not going to be like a standard runway show. Expect characters, story arcs and references to follow—like watching a play, but make it fashion. And above all, expect to be wowed. “My goal isn’t to sell people these clothes—I know that the average consumer isn’t going to want to wear a complete rhinestoned catsuit to the grocery store,” says Clayton. “What I’m sharing is craftsmanship, a really strong aesthetic, and a story.”
Evan Clayton September 24, 8:00 p.m. Vancouver Art Gallery Tickets $54 on eventbrite