Tom Sachs Wants You to Dress Like You Work There

by OS Staff
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For Tom Sachs, the studio isn’t a vibe — it’s a system. And systems, as he’s long made clear, require discipline. His latest project doesn’t arrive as a sculpture or a NASA-coded installation, but as something arguably more intimate: a complete studio uniform, engineered for those who take the act of making seriously.

The article unpacks how Sachs has translated his meticulous, workshop-driven philosophy into garments designed for focus, repetition, and labour. This isn’t fashion as fantasy. It’s clothing as infrastructure. Built around durable fabrics, pragmatic cuts, and stripped-back functionality, the uniform is conceived to withstand the realities of glue, dust, metal, and long hours under fluorescent light.

Sachs has always treated the studio like a cross between a laboratory and a dojo — a place governed by rules, hierarchies, and ritual. In that context, the uniform becomes less aesthetic choice and more code of conduct. By standardising what you wear, you remove friction. Decision fatigue disappears. What remains is the work.

There’s a quiet irony in presenting a uniform within a culture obsessed with self-expression. But that tension is precisely the point. Sachs has never romanticised the myth of the chaotic genius; instead, he champions structure as a catalyst for creativity. The uniform signals commitment — to craft, to precision, to collective standards.

Photos: Tom Sachs

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