Interview
with Textile Designer Celia Birtwell
The
internationally acclaimed textile designer Celia Birtwell
was interviewed in London in a joint project with staff
from the V&A Museum's Fashion and Textiles Department.
The interviewer was Sonnet Stanfill, V&A Curator
of Contemporary Fashion.
Celia
was described in a recent Guardian Weekend Magazine
interview (08.04.2006) as a '60s textile print
icon'. Her fabrics have been worn by Jimi Hendrix,
the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. After a decade
of designing textiles for fashion, Celia opened her
interiors textile business in the early 1980s. As an
independent designer she established herself as an
important part of London's design community. This summer
vintage Birtwell prints will be released in a new range
of women's clothes by the high-street retailer Topshop.
The
interview took place at Celia's textile design shop
in West London. She is due to hand over the reins of
the business to her son and daughter-in-law later in
the year so it was an excellent time to interivew her
to record her feelings about her twenty or so years
operating a textile design business. Celia will continue
to design for the business.
Celia's
textile designs have taken inspiration from the natural
world and also from museum collections such as the
V & A. Celia has donated a large collection of
textiles for interiors to the V&A. These include
'Beasties', an important early Birtwell design based
on a 16th century V&A textile.
Sue Prichard, Curator of Contemporary Textiles, was instrumental in
setting up the interview and liaising with the NEVAC crew to make sure
it all went smoothly.
Interviewer:
Sonnet Stanfill.
Director: Matthew Partington.
Lighting cameraman: Ben Atkins.
Soundman: Dave Brookfield.