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Above all, there are extravagant costumes, including the multicolored quilted jumpsuit from that pivotal "Starman" appearance, designed by Freddie Burretti. Bowie wore it with red patent leather boots, calling the look "ultraviolence in Liberty fabrics." Fashion always played a major part in creating the Bowie mystique, and he chose designers carefully, from the late Alexander McQueen
-- whose Union Jack coat adorned Bowie's "Earthling" album cover
-- to Kansai Yamamoto, a key 1970s collaborator. The show includes several flamboyant Yamamoto outfits, including a knitted cat suit that Bowie wore as Aladdin Sane. The exhibition reveals, endearingly, that a knitting pattern was published so fans could make their own versions. The David Bowie who emerges through the exhibition is a canny businessman and hard-working innovator as well as eclectic artist. Bowie has released 27 studio albums, and performed 1,000 gigs in 12 tours between 1972 and 2004. Along the way, he sold shares in himself with the issue of "Bowie Bonds" and set up the website and online community Bowienet. And then he stopped, seemingly retiring for good in 2004 after suffering a heart attack. Exhibition co-curator Geoffrey Marsh argues that retiring from public view was yet another example of Bowie's genius. "He's been famous for 10 years by doing nothing," Marsh said. Then, earlier this year, Bowie startled the world by announcing he was releasing a new album. "The Next Day," with its melancholy backward glances at Bowie's time in divided Berlin in the 1970s, has received largely positive reviews. Fans are even starting to dream there could be some new live shows. And there is little sign of Bowie's influence waning. "When we started this exhibition, we thought we were reaching 'peak Bowie,'" Broackes said. "But we're opening in a week when he has an album that is No. 1 in 40 countries." "David Bowie Is" runs at London's Victoria and Albert Museum until Aug. 11, and at the Museum of Image and Sound in Sao Paulo, Brazil, from January to April 2014. ___ Online: http://www.vam.ac.uk/
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