Download 'Too Hot', an exclusive Specials track from iTunes
Verhoeven, 37, changed the direction of fashion magazines with serpentine, romantic illustrations that recalled Egon Schiele, Aubrey Beardsley and Jean Cocteau. Among many other things, she has designed bags for Louis Vuitton, a line of clothing for the Italian manufacturers Gibo, and album sleeves for Primal Scream.
Coxon, also 37, is the musician who after ten years in Blur embarked on a solo career that to date has produced six albums, the most recent of which, Love Travels at Illegal Speeds, won critical praise this spring.
Two leading figures at the cutting edge. So why do they look so petrified? Coxon is shrouded behind heavy rimmed specs that he describes as his “chuck-ons” (he says he needs particular confidence to wear the wire-framed variety), and Verhoeven appears to be hiding behind some eccentric dressage, which is finished off with a mermaid that you can play like a recorder and a miniature medal of the Mona Lisa. With Coxon racked by the compulsion to fidget, Verhoeven begins her sales pitch for the new work by describing one piece as a pathetic sort of attempt at a sort of stage set. “Mush,” she later calls it. With promotion like this, it’s a good thing the quality of the work speaks for itself.
The new show feels like Verhoeven’s reflection on the years she has spent in the fashion business, because it takes the theme of dressing up and self-creation and transforms it into a lively theatrical fantasy. She has taken a variety of old folding screens, adorned them with fine needlepoint drawings and created a series of sculptures that hang from their sides — over-sized hand-mirrors, fans, papier-mâché bras.
They are “upset-dressing tables”, she says, “Victoriana gone wrong”. As if they have been lying about for decades and started to be reclaimed by nature, they are beginning to sprout plants from their surfaces.
Coxon is aiming for a similarly organic feel in his accompanying music. “I want to do something that in some way fits with the environment,” he says, “which somehow exaggerates the space, magnifies aspects of it. So it will be a meandering sound piece with mini-events throughout. It will be a blanket of sounds, like a scattering of dust. It will have old-fashioned sounds, and I’d like to copy sounds made by people in the gallery.”
After the strictures of fashion, Verhoeven is revelling in resdiscovering the freedom of the art world. “It’s sheer indulgence,” she says. Coxon agrees. “There are no boundaries,” he explains. “I don’t have to work within less than three minutes so that it will go on the radio. It doesn’t have to be catchy or have a chorus." The ideas behind the music also represent something of a return to his roots for Coxon. He trained in fine art at Goldsmiths in the early 1990s alongside such people as Damien Hirst and Sam Taylor-Wood, although his speciality, he says, was paintings of German soldiers (he grew up on an army camp in West Germany) and wooden sculptures of tools and ploughs, and “machines with sails”. “When I arrived, people seemed far too pompous. They were bloody clever — they were already doing great things before they had even left school — so I soon went from being a pretty serious art student to being one that was scared to death.”
Fearlessness has come for both people, it seems, with experience, but what has undoubtedly made their partnership work above all is their shared love of the 1960s. Many said that Blur re-invented English pop psychedelia and Coxon still says says he doesn’t like to leave the house unless he looks as if he could be walking into that lost decade. Verhoeven’s illustration, meanwhile, has often looked like a reinvention of 1960s styles, a newer, more frankly erotic psychedelic design.
This really is a meeting of minds, and for the short time that such strange collaborations come into being, it feels as though something has been captured, a moment is being bottled, in an extraordinary way. Needless to say, when I ask Verhoeven and Coxon about getting together to create a new mood, to redescribe an earlier time, they are lost for words. They just do it. They don’t have to think about it.
Ver-boten, Ver-Saatchi, Ver-heaven, Riflemaker, Beak Street, London W1 (www.riflemaker.org 020-7439 0000), Mon-Nov 18
Win a luxury weekend to Newcastle and its neighbour Gateshead, find out more here
Risk, resilience and embracing new technology
Industry sectors news at a glance. Interactive heatmap, video and podcast
Discover the power of collective thinking. Submit a solution and be in with a chance to win a Media Hub Home Entertainment System
The inside track on current trends in the charity, not for profit and social enterprise sectors
Everything the Business Traveller needs to know to make a better trip
Make the most of the summer and enter our fabulous photographic competition, you could win a £5000 holiday
Corsica is an island of beauty and contrast, an ideal holiday destination
Enjoy further reading from Travel to Fashion, Business to Sport, discover more
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
The clever way to lease a new car is with Car leasing made simple™
2009
per month on 36-month
Personal Contract Hire (PCH)
2008
42850
Car Insurance
£24,250 - £30,346
MI5
London
£60,000
The Environment Agency
Bristol
Up to £90K
Boots
Midlands
OTE £85k
Credit Protection Association
Nationwide Opportunities
Completely London
Luxury Condo's in Manhattan with NYC views
The best new homes in Wimbledon?
Nationwide
Fabulous Cruise And Cruise & Stay Offers Including Virgin Atlantic Flights Prices Start From Only £699pp!
Last Minute Cruise And Cruise & Stay Offers. Med From £499pp, Caribbean From £699pp!
5 star quality at a 3 star price.
8 fabulous Canadian cities ...you won’t find cheaper
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times, or place your advertisement.
Times Online Services: Dating | Jobs | Property Search | Used Cars | Holidays | Births, Marriages, Deaths | Subscriptions | E-paper
News International associated websites: Globrix Property Search | Property Finder | Milkround
Copyright 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.