Grace: Capturing your collections through photography as well as exhibitions and showroom spaces seems like an important way to archive. This also completes a life cycle of the work in that it is honored, displayed and presented. Your Joburg Glasshouse Showroom, your Mutual Heights Apartment space, your collections from Confections x Collections, global Fashion Weeks are all extremely intentional.. How does it feel to see your work out in the world, living a life of its own?
Lezanne: In the end when you do the show or the presentation, that is when the concept comes to life. The story that you wrote, the questions that you asked, is now alive. You don’t necessarily know what it would look like visually when you write the concept, but here it is, alive and breathing.
Grace: Recently I’ve been thinking a lot about how people are so addicted to instant gratification. It makes it challenging to try to figure out how we can create a culture and broader society where things are more intentional, slower and longer-lasting. However, when it comes to slowing down there’s also a question of the luxury of time and having the luxury to slow down. My question to you is, what does luxury represent to you?
Lezanne: Human touch. Human nature. It takes time to educate your audience through challenging dialogues, especially in the fast fashion industry that exists. It takes time to explain to someone that a well-made dress takes at least 3 to 4 full days of someone working on it in our studio, compared to a pair of Levi jeans made in a factory in under 15 minutes.
I ask myself, ‘why do people not buy clothing with the same intention as when they are buying artworks?’ It’s something that you bring into your space. To me, energy is very important. So there’s a reason why fast fashion is bought and given away or sold or thrown away because the energy in the garment probably does not align with your soul.
Our experience of life is splitting into two kinds of very distinct directions: people that are more conscious, people who are drawn to things with positive meanings, serving communities and others and people who are frenzy-focused, hype culture-focussed and part of the disposable culture that is mostly driven by service to the self. It’s just two different approaches, each individual chooses that for themselves. I don’t think you should try and change them because you can’t change anyone and their soul contract.
Grace: You can’t force someone to open their eyes.
Lezanne: You can splash someone with cold water, you can plant little seeds, but at the end of the day, who’s going to keep watering the seeds?
Grace: Tell us a bit about NURU and the showroom taking place over the Investec Cape Town Art Fair period this February. Could you share a little about what this year might hold for you, more broadly?
Lezanne: Looking forward, I think it’s a pivotal year; the year of the snake. I follow astrology very closely and 2025 is a big year of completions and beginnings, the most pivotal year to date; the year of change All those things that you have been struggling with or have been carrying internally, throw them in the garbage, heal your inner child and clean your closet to open space for the new, fresh wave of creativity and flow, but, this requires silencing the mind from the chaos around you.
We’ve been in business for 5 years now and it feels like there’s a new phase emerging. That phase is also part of why we started NURU: it means more nice people, more collaboration, more community-driven collectives, more intention and more mutual respect
It’s about not trying to convert people but finding people who have the same approach to life and making more time for them. A big theme for me for this year is remembering that at the end of the day, you choose your own reality, you determine what makes you happy. No one else can do that for you. Less stress, more play. Change your mind, change your reality. You are the creator of your own experience.
In a world so driven by satiation and a bombardment of distractions, especially from one’s true self, it feels increasingly rare to encounter a creative like Lezanne – one who believes in community, one who could convince you to hear a whisper underwater.
NURU showroom will be taking place at Lezanne’s penthouse of Mutual Heights Building for a curated viewing experience of a collection of local sustainable designers – by appointment over the Investec Cape Town Art Fair (18-24 February).
Follow Lezanne Viviers on Instagram here
Visit Viviers Studio Website here
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