Inside Oslo’s International Library of Fashion Research

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Inside Oslo’s International Library of Fashion Research
Inside Oslo’s International Library of Fashion Research

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It’s rumoured that the ghost of the old station master can be felt gliding through Stasjonsmesterboligen – the cream-coloured, three-floor building located at the entrance to the scenic Aker Brygge area of Oslo. Dating back to the 1920s, it was once part of the former westbound railway station, yet today the site is host to another kind of ethereal presence. 

Now home to the International Library of Fashion Research (ILFR) – the brainchild of firebrand publisher Elise By Olsen – the Station Master’s House, as the building’s name translates, holds more than 5,000 pieces of contemporary printed matter that were once destined to be discarded. This notion of the ‘station between’ shaped Olsen’s ambition to open a place where the ephemerality of the material donated by late cultural theorist Steven Mark Klein can help steer critical fashion discourse. The doors open on 29 November 2022. 

Inside the International Library of Fashion Research

International Library of Fashion Research, Oslo

(Image credit: Courtesy ofInternational Library of Fashion Research)

What does a fashion space devoid of commercial function look like? Ahead of the library’s opening, without anything on its shelves and with piles of magazines and lookbooks swaddled in bubble wrap on the floor, Olsen joins Wallpaper* on Zoom while folding archival box after archival box. ‘The space is minimal, but it has this punch. It’s a carte blanche space for study,’ she says. 



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