CNN  — 

China’s most famous fashion designer, Guo Pei, is known for her dramatic dresses. The couturiere’s ornate creations have appeared not only on runways, but on red carpets, big-budget Chinese movies and major museum exhibitions.

Guo first rose to fame in 2008, when 300 of her designs were worn by performers at the opening and closing ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics. She then attracted global headlines when Rihanna attended the 2015 Met Gala dressed in the designer’s 55-pound canary yellow fur-trimmed cape, which reportedly took a team of seamstresses more than two years to complete.

But as a child growing up during China’s Cultural Revolution, Guo’s first encounters with fashion were far from colorful. In a new book, “Guo Pei: Couture Beyond,” she says that the idea of bright silk fabrics was almost unimaginable at a time when her clothes consisted of drab outfits made of coarse cotton.

Howl Collective
An image from the new book "Guo Pei: Couture Beyond," which explores the designers best-known creations.

She was nonetheless enthralled by her grandmother’s tales – memories of imperial gowns, and dresses adorned with real butterflies or peonies during the last years of the Qing dynasty. 

“My grandmother taught me about elegance,” Guo is quoted as saying in the book. “Every night when I was 4 or 5, she described the dresses that women wore in the old days, and I pictured them before I fell asleep. She told me about how she used a thread to embroider flowers onto her clothes. Back then, there weren’t photos, but my imagination could run freely.”

Fantastical photography

That imagination has spawned a glittering career in fashion. It has also inspired New York-based photography group, Howl Collective, to produce 13 theatrical images for the forthcoming book.

Commissioned by the Savannah College of Art and Design, the fantastical pictures explore themes of East and West, past and future, and dream and reality. They were shot in Georgia and South Carolina, where Guo’s designs were being kept for an a solo exhibition at the college – her first in the US.

© Howl Collective.
An image from Howl Collective's new photo collection of Guo Pei's best-known designs.
Photograph by HOWL Collective/Courtesy of SCAD
Guo in known for the intricate detailing on her garments, which can take years to complete.
Photograph by HOWL Collective/Courtesy of SCAD
Guo's ornate creations have appeared on runways, red carpets, big-budget Chinese movies and major museum exhibitions.
Photograph by HOWL Collective/Courtesy of SCAD
Guo's elaborate creations have made her a designer of choice for Chinese celebrities.
Photograph by HOWL Collective/Courtesy of SCAD
Guo often incorporates elements of traditional Chinese design into her work.
Photograph by HOWL Collective/Courtesy of SCAD
Guo is known for her use of gold, pearls and other lavish materials.
Courtesy Guo Pei
Guo is known for her expertise in embroidery and artistic understanding of fashion.
Guo Pei
This dress, called "Dajin," was embroidered with gold and pearls, requiring more than 50,000 hours of work.
timothy a clary/afp/getty
Rihanna wore this bright yellow creation to the 2015 Met Gala. Guo Pei and her team spent around 8,000 hours working on the garment.
Guo Pei
Guo designed a costume for opera singer Song Zuying's performance at the 2008 Beijing Olympics closing ceremony.
Guo Pei
Guo's Spring-Summer 2010 collection showcased 16 works, and featured model Carmen Dell'Orefice, who was 78 years old at the time.
Guo Pei
The collection included origami-like, three-dimensional boleros with ornate gold applique, as well as elaborate metallic headgear.
Courtesy Guo Pei
Guo fused elements of Arabic culture and attire with her own Chinese aesthetics for the collection.
Courtesy Guo Pei
The collection also featured a Japanese-inspired dress.
Courtesy Guo Pei
In 1982, Guo was accepted into the Beijing School of Industrial Design, where she studied drawing, sketching and pattern-making. She began her career as a children's clothing designer in 1987 and opened her own venture, called Rose Studio, with her husband in 1997.
Courtesy Guo Pei
In her 2007 collection, "An Amazing Journey in a Childhood Dream," Guo tells a fairy tale from a child's perspective.
Guo Pei
Garments from Guo's 2015 "Garden of the Soul" collection.
Courtesy Guo Pei
The designer celebrated the Chinese year of the dragon with her mythology-inspired collection, "Legend of the Dragon," in 2012.
Courtesy Guo Pei
The dragon is considered an auspicious symbol in Chinese culture, and represents strength, power and good fortune.
Courtesy Guo Pei
Guo's collection brought dragon motifs to life through golden embroidery and crystal embellishments.
Courtesy Guo Pei
The collection took Guo and her team almost three years to complete.
Courtesy Guo Pei
One of the dresses in the collection, called Dragon Lady, incorporates 465,756 hand-beaded pearls.

Howl Collective’s creative director, Jim Lind, said that Guo was looking for a “Western interpretation” of her garments, and that she gave the photographers complete creative freedom.

“We took Guo Pei’s designs out into the wilderness to find fantastical effects in the natural world,” he said in a phone interview. “Shooting them on location gives that extra realism to the images.”

Lind and his team built a fairytale-inspired storyboard based on the motifs, ornate patterns and stitching techniques used by Guo. They also looked to outside cultural references, including the work of British photographer Tim Walker and even the TV series “Game of Thrones.”

Howl Collective
One of the book's images is a direct reference to "Alice in Wonderland."

In one photo, a model in a mushroom-like gold sequin dress gazes into a tunnel – a direct reference to the rabbit hole in “Alice in Wonderland,” Lind said.

Guo’s designs also inspired the photographers’ choice of location. Her “porcelain” dress, with its kinetic shape and blue and white coloring, led to a photo shoot in front of a lighthouse, complete with a backdrop of crashing waves.

03:04 - Source: CNN
Chinese master couturier Guo Pei

A delicate craft

Capturing Guo’s delicate works was a challenge, said Lind, revealing that an exhibition team was brought on set to care for the garments.

“They were museum pieces that are very delicate and fragile,” he added.

Many of Guo’s designs incorporate ancient yet familiar Chinese symbols. Among her most commonly used motifs are lotuses, representing purity of mind and spirit, as well as mountains and waves, which were frequently used on the hems of royal court robes.

Howl Collective
Howl Collective took Guo's delicate creations to a number of ourdoor locations.

Elsewhere, the “meander,” or “cloud and thunder” pattern, represents rain and abundance. Guo also regularly uses dragons – a nod to the stone statues she encountered in Beijing parks when she was young.

“I think that fashion shouldn’t just be about the present, and I care more about the meaning behind the details,” Guo is quoted as saying. “As such, the embroidery and motifs you see on my clothing have stories behind them.”

Guo Pei: Couture Beyond,” published by Rizzoli and the Savannah College of Art and Design, is available now.