Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion

Thirty years ago, when influencers and social networks did not yet exist, the gap between fashion and the new generations was even more complex to bridge. In addition to music and cinema, comics, especially Japanese comics, were a real Pandora's box overflowing with information on the hottest trends of the moment. Despite his multi-year retirement from the oriental comics scene, Ai Yazawa remains one of the most famous names in the world of anime and manga. Flipping through the pages of her albums, one quickly realizes that hers are not classic shōjo (manga for little girls) like "Sailor Moon" or "Card Captor Sakura": the themes addressed are more mature and profound, there is no room for magic, and her characters are young adults grappling with complex issues. But the real reason for his success, which still fascinates the new generations, is his long liaison with the fashion world, and especially with Vivienne Westwood

Before becoming one of the youngest and most successful mangaka in the Rising Sun, Ai Yazawa attended a fashion institute that enabled her to develop an unmistakable drawing style and an almost maniacal attention to detail. The love for fashion is a leitmotif that unites all the characters, from "Courtyards of the Heart" to the famous and unfinished "Nana". Amidst young aspiring fashion designers and rising stars of punk music, the protagonists of Ai Yazawa's shōjo sport meticulously detailed looks inspired by the youth movements of the 1990s. From her first manga in '95, "Courtyards of the Heart," we begin to glimpse the identifying traits of her style: characters with delicate, harmonious features and a sleek physicality that makes them look more like fashion sketches than flesh-and-blood people. Early references to the subcultures of the early 1990s appear, including lolita style, shibukaji (French casual), inspired by Chanel fashion, and retro-cyber style made of synthetic fabrics, plastic accessories, wedge boots, and baggy pants.

Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410813
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410814
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410815
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410816
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410817
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410818
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410819
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410820
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410821
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410838
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410839
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410840
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410837
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410836
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410822
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410823
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410824
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410825
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410826
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410827
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410828
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410829
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410830
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410831
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410832
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410833
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410834
Ai Yazawa, the mangaka in love with Vivienne Westwood The cartoonist who with her tributes to punk has made us passionate about the world of fashion | Image 410835

Mentioning the Sex Pistols, it's impossible not to mention the character of Ren, Nana Osaki's boyfriend: practically a reverse cosplay of Sid Vicious, with spiky hair, a leather stud and a chain locked with a padlock around his neck. The pioneers of British punk music, after all, were also Vivienne Westwood's top models, and Ai Yazawa tried her hand at the same painstaking styling for the rock bands illustrated in her comic book, the "Black Stones" and the "Trapnests." Among tartan suits, bondage pants, corsets and ripped T-shirts, the most elegant piece mentioned in the manga is undoubtedly the "Red Heart Jacket": a double-breasted velvet blazer from the "Red Label" collection launched in 1999 with a black heart-shaped closure. In the wake of this trend, next to the famous "Ebury Bag" that accompanies various female characters throughout the shōjo, the most constant presence on the feet of the protagonists is the "Rocking Horse" shoe: an oriental-inspired shoe presented during the 1985 "Mini Crini" fashion show. With her latest manga, on the other hand, Ai Yazawa not only dwells on the celebration of punk, but also enjoys sketching the "lightning bolt" styles of the turn of the century, including the ganguro or gyaru: hyper-tanned young girls with fake eyelashes and pearly powder, discolored hairstyles and glittery accessories, decidedly kitschy.

Just as some trends make an immense round trip and then return, new generations (and not just the weeb) are bringing "Nana" outfits back into vogue on social networks such as TikTok and Twitter, creating a compact fandom and a string of viral moodboards more than two decades after the manga's debut. This phenomenon of "resurgence"-no doubt due to the anime's recent landing on Netflix-goes hand in hand with the growing obsession with archival pieces by more established designers, and in "Nana," Vivienne Westwood's most iconic collections manage to reach a diverse and heterogeneous audience, not only composed of established fashionistas. Many young people come into contact with punk fashion through the fascinating production of Ai Yazawa, immortalizing once again the various facets of a self-expressive style that never stops evolving.