Advertisement
Advertisement
Shopping

Black, White, and Screaming Color: Fashion in the Language of Color Field Art

Photographed by Annemarie Sterian

From Mark Rothko to Ellsworth Kelly, the language of Color Field Art is sweeping through fashion, turning dressing into pure visual expression.

“The rest of the world was black and white, but we were in screaming color,” sings Taylor Swift in her 1989 track Out of the Woods, using the color to symbolize the extreme parallels of emotion in contrast to neutrality, widely interpreted as the intensity of her relationship with Harry Styles. Emerging in mid-20th-century postwar America, Color Field Art is a genre of art that reduces painting to an uninterrupted canvas of one or several tones, stripping gesture and inviting interpretation. Artists such as Clyfford Still, Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, and Helen Frankenthaler moved away from the intensity of Abstract Expressionism toward the simplicity of immersive planes, and currently, this philosophy has trickled into the Spring/Summer 2026 collections. In both art and dress, monochrome becomes a study of control, forming a visual language in which color is not simply seen, but felt.

Below, Vogue Philippines has rounded up the best monochrome items for your selection.

Photographs by Annemarie Sterian. Styling by Harriet Nicolson. Styling Assistant: Carla Grottola. Makeup: Alex Reader at One Represents. Hair: Masashi Konno at Saint Luke Artists. Model: Parvesh Mudgal at PRM. Casting Director: Melissa Scott. Executive Producer: Alex Aalto. Head of Production: Melissa Scott. Producer – Art Buying: Jimi Agboola. Photography Assistants: Aniella Weinberge & Suzanna Hil. Location Agency: Rosie Harrison at Airspace Locations. Edit and words by Neil de Guzman and Lawrence Harrison.

Advertisement
More From Vogue
Share now on:
FacebookXEmailCopy Link
Advertisement

To provide a customized ad experience, we need to know if you are of legal age in your region.

By making a selection, you agree to our Terms & Conditions.