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The Daft Punk Pop Up

A neon Daft Punk Logo is flanked by posters featuring licensed Daft Punk Merchandise at the Daft Punk Pop Up at Maxfield Gallery in Los Angeles in February of 2017.

Back in February of 2017, Daft Punk announced a collaboration between lifestyle purveyor Maxfield, and several designers, to open a pop-up shop on Melrose Avenue.

The shop was slated to remain open for only eight days and feature merchandise from a variety of collaborators including:

Marketing poster for the Daft Punk Pop Up in February of 2017 at Maxfield Gallery in Los Angeles.

Of course all the collaborators were listed in the marketing material leading up to the shop’s opening, which raises the question, why did I bother to type all that out when I could just show you this amazing poster?

Well, I guess I’m just a hard worker. 

While the interior of Maxfield Gallery (not to be confused with Maxfield LA (across the street) is just warehouse space looking out on Melrose, they always manage to fill it with cool(?) hypebeasty stuff that helped coin the phrase “a trust-fund hipster and their monthly subsidy are soon parted.”

But so what? Everyone should indulge every now and then and there was no shortage of cool stuff for sale, and in addition, the stuff that wasn’t for sale was pretty amazing as well.

~24 inch robot dolls watch the line outside Maxfield Gallery for the Daft Punk Pop Up in February of 2017
Oversize Thomas & Guy-Manuel dolls stare at fans waiting in line outside Maxfield Gallery in February 2017

To clarify: It did not disappoint from the standpoint of being an astonishing archive of the group’s creative output over the past two decades, even if I couldn’t wrap my head around a lot of the fashion collaborations.

Again, not personally not being a trust fund hypebeast, I couldn’t pull off really any of the styles there. The walls were lined in officially authorized merchandise, but for the most part, it wasn’t anything that couldn’t be purchased from Daft Punk’s website itself, although there were certain items that pre-dated the formation of the site, such as the Medicom action figures (which have never been sold there), and the skateboard collaboration with Hervet Manufacturier.

Speaking of Hervet Mfg, the company revolves primarily around stunning furniture design for stunning prices that are stunningly worth it if you have that kind of stunning money. The brainchild of Cedric Hervet and his brother, Cedric is the creative third leg of Daft Punk, responsible for working Thomas and Guy-Man with the visual and story-related aspects of most of their endeavors.

Okay, that’s enough about sofas and skateboards, back to the Pop Up:

The walls were lined with merchandise found on Daft Punk’s website – things like candles, shirts, posters, skate decks, Christmas ornaments. As nearly as I could tell, all the merchandise was ethically made stuff (which matters a lot to me).

And then there was the floor space. 

The floor space was amazing, with an  absolutely incredible array of artifacts from the band’s past, including multiple iterations of their famed robot costumes, props and instruments from music videos, and even costume pieces pre-dating even discovery, such has Halloween masks worn prior to adopting their robot personas.

The helmets themselves were heavily influenced on anime characters and 1950’s American sci-fi with Guy-Man’s helmet a tribute to helmets worn by Scott Bernard and other characters from Mospeada (Robotech and Macross) and Thomas’ helmet being largely influenced by Addison Hehr’s design for Gort from the 1951 film, ‘The Day the Earth Stood Still.’ A myriad of versions of the duo’s coveted helmets have been made, so let’s go through what was there:

1. Discovery: 2001 – 2004

Most impressive were the fully-lit helmets from the Discovery Era (2001-2004). The helmets were designed in a collaboration between Daft Punk (and probably Cedric), special effects make-up godfather Tony Gardner and his company Alterian Inc, and a  show design firm called LED Effects. Initially, they were not lit and featured chromic visors, but later, LED Effects (now seemingly no longer in business) stuffed them chock full of what was at the time, groundbreaking LED matrix displays that could output a number of animated presets. To the right there are some examples of them in action:

Initially powered by heavy battery packs, the helmets were later converted to AC as, I speculate, they realized that they would never be used in public beyond one video done for publicity prior to the final iteration of the helmets in their full LED splendor. The switch to AC allowed for further electronics, removal of heavy backpacks, and the realization that power cords could be photoshopped out or hidden with camera angles in press materials.

Despite being used only for publicity in controlled settings, their vacuum-metalizing had shown some wear over the intervening seventeen years. You might guess that they took a beating from heavy use well but their electronics remained in perfect condition (cosmetically anyway), suggesting that the metal pitting was nobody’s fault, but simply a shortcoming of the processes available at the time. It’s also worth noting, that using these helmets basically rendered the wearers blind as the gauge of the wires and ribbons used was THICK. These helmets were heavy, and likely got pretty hot inside. I can’t help but wonder if they still work. It stands to reason that they should.

2. Human After All / Electroma / Alive 2007: 2005 – 2007

I’m unsure as to the order of events here with regards to what the duo decided to do first, whether it was the film Electroma, record Human After All, or sign a deal to go on a tour, but two of these three creative endeavors necessitated an evolution of the Robots’ costumes from the standpoint of practicality. They couldn’t expect the electronic helmets to hold up to the physical rigors of a live tour or film production and perhaps they were over the hassle from the standpoint of marketing a new record, so all electronics were ditched in favor of extremely lightweight fiberglass helmets that could easily be mass produced as costume pieces for a film and swapped out on tour should one be damaged. Added bonus, you could walk more than eight feet since you weren’t plugged in to the wall. If you’re curious about Electroma, and want to take an hour and nine minute break from reading this post, you can watch it below as long as the link to the Russian YouTuber who’s sharing it doesn’t get taken down. It’s lasted three years. Perhaps YouTube’s UGC algorithm doesn’t work with Cyrillic text?

As you can see, Daft Punk ditched the quirky fashion associated with the Discovery era and donned leather motorcycle suits designed by Hedi Slimane, who also photographed the Alive 2007 tour and whose photographs are used in the album art for the accompanying live album. His photography is decent, and he gets high points for shooting film. Love that grain. Additional costumes were developed in collaboration with Janet Hansen of Enlightened Designs, an early adopter of EL wire as costume element, for the Alive 2007 tour’s encore in which the robots lit up like programs from the 1982 Disney film TRON. This last bit about light-up motorcycle suits had the added subversive element of Daft Punk communicating subliminally with Disney that they wanted to collaborate on something, anything. A couple of lines of business at Disney eventually came calling, and the duo opted to score the sequel to Tron, TRON: LEGACY in 2010, which leads us, after the images below, and an ad break, to…

3. TRON: LEGACY: 2010

For the film, the group wore motorcycle-style suits that might have utilized reflective fabric to create a glowing effect. If so, then this was much lower tech than the costumes everyone else got in the film, which used actual LEDs for illumination. The suits were also a much finer (and perforated) grain of leather than the suits the other “programs” wore, suggesting they really got off easy in terms of staying cool. I read somewhere that the rest of the casts’ costumes often got so hot they needed fans installed.

The lights on the faces of the helmets as seen in the movie may have been  digital effects as there was no indication of electronics. It seems like it would be a lot of work to do something like that digitally, and it’s possible that the helmets were just switched off here, which would be a bummer.

Of slight interest is that the bezels on these helmets were noticeably thicker than previous helmets, which suggests a redesign from scratch.

 

4. Random Access Memories’ Grammy Win: 2014 

On the day I went to the Pop Up, the costumes conceived for the Random Access Memories marketing and promotion were not on display (they showed up on a later date), however the white outfits worn for their Grammy win were. They were white with gold visors. Not much more to say about that other than that we’ve seen a continued evolution and refinement of the robotic elements over time, which hints at the notion that the robots are aging, not in a linear organic fashion, but rather, a cerebral synthetic fashion. They change with time, just like the rest of us, but as their appearance becomes more perfected and precise, their interests have become more organic and analog, and indicated by their music and pursuit of visual arts.

Mind you, those suits do look hard to keep clean.

Well that’s about all there is left in my memory from the Pop-Up. Of course if you’re in LA, don’t not go to Maxfield because the Daft Punk Pop-Up is no longer there. The Maxfield Gallery consistently hosts amazing exhibitions and limited runs of merchandise and is a joy to check out.

If you’re wondering if I got anything while I was there….I did. But I guess you had to be there.

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