Two years ago, he was marked as a promise with a final project that dealt with sexual harassment in his childhood as ultra-Orthodox. Now the young designer is nominated for awards in international competition, but the trauma is not yet letting go
The Lottery Launches for the fifth year, the "Lottery Incubator for Fashion Designers" initiative, which helps and supports Israeli fashion designers in creating a new clothing collection.
A professional art committee will examine the proposals that will be submitted and select fashion designers who
will receive a grant of up to NIS 120,000 for designing and producing the new clothing collection and for producing an initial quantity of items from the collection.
In addition, the winning designers will receive artistic and business support by senior professionals in the Israeli market.
The new collections will premiere at the Tel Aviv Fashion Week, scheduled for March 2020.
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Two years ago, he was marked as a promise with a final project that dealt with sexual harassment in his childhood as ultra-Orthodox. Now the young designer is nominated for awards in international competition, but the trauma is not yet letting go
Six brands were selected to participate in the fifth cycle of the Young Designer Support Project, which includes a grant of up to NIS 120,000 and participation in the fashion week. First publication
Last June, Aaron Ganish presented his final collection at Hangar 11 in Tel Aviv, called "Don't shut up!" It was his final project at the WIZO Haifa Academic Center, where he completed a fashion design degree this year. The dramatic, defiant collection, which combines turbulent textures and colors of
red, black and white, devoted to a personal and painful theme - the hiding and silencing of sexual harassment in the ultra-Orthodox sector.
"I would like the teacher who survived and sexually harassed me to see the collection I designed, understand everything, suffocate and die," says Aharon Ganish, who grew up as an ultra-Orthodox, inquired about the sexual harassment he went through in the clothing he designs today. "Even when I was ul
tra-Orthodox, I imagined having a clothing store on Rabbi Akiva Street, Bnei Brak's Shinkin.