Friday, March 5, 2010

Creating the World of Tomorrow,PARIS FASHION WEEK


Creating the World of Tomorrow,PARIS FASHION WEEK
PARIS — The conjunction in this fashion week of a definitive exhibition of the work of Yves Saint Laurent, whose masculine/feminine vision dominated the wardrobe of the 20th-century woman, and a book celebrating 60 years of Pierre Cardin, fashion’s eternal futurist, gives pause for thought.

The Balenciaga show detonated the Paris 2010 autumn season on Thursday with a collection that was hyper-modern and futuristic — even if the designer Nicolas Ghesquière has been working before along these lines.

Here were all the designer’s codes: sculptural shapes, streamlined pants, shoes with block heels that looked like a Cubist painting and artistic references. They included allusions to Cristóbal Balenciaga’s work in “angel wing” shapes. For the new version, they were created as a padded puffa bodice with loose flaps at the back.

Then there were the fabrics and their treatments — perhaps the most revolutionary thing about this collection since Mr. Ghesquière already has established his sci fi-meets-Star Wars look.

“It is about how to embellish the everyday,” said the designer backstage, showing how knitwear, which starred in the show, was treated as if rubber studs had been stamped into the wool. And that was just the start. There were also embroidered pants that looked as if they were overlaid in plastic but were apparently the melding of two materials.

Add to all that vivid “Formica” colors, as the designer described the turquoise and lime colors of 1970s kitchen surfaces, and lettering that appeared with poster boldness, taken from photographs of newsprint by the late Irving Penn.

“Magnificent! Exceptional! So chic and so French,” said Frédéric Mitterrand, the French cultural minister, who was sitting front row beside François-Henri Pinault, chief executive of the PPR group that supports Balenciaga.

The show was so exhilarating in its imagination — if rooted in Mr. Ghesquière’s world — that it had the greatest visual whammy seen so far this fashion season. But you still have to ask about today’s Balenciaga the same question that could be asked of Mr. Cardin’s original satellite creations. Is it, as it is shown, wearable and comprehensible outside the fashion cognoscenti?

Mr. Ghesquière has addressed this issue, showing a year ago, in the same gilded and graceful interior of the Hôtel Crillon, a collection of bourgeois glamour founded on the work of Yves Saint Laurent. At that time, it was as though he were announcing, “You want graceful, feminine modern clothes? Yes, I can do that, too!”

But for 2010, the mood was uncompromisingly futuristic — and therefore a little familiar. Of course you could break down these pieces and put an apricot sweater over a pair of black pants and pass unnoticed in the street. Take off the platform shoes and loosen the scraped back hair and dresses with lace were pretty and sophisticated.

That is the skill of Mr. Ghesquière’s Balenciaga, which is exceptional in cut and fabric and is guaranteed to be on magazine front covers. Yet it never captures that emotional ode to women’s natural beauty that was intrinsic both to Cristóbal Balenciaga’s grand gestures and to the Saint Laurent aesthetic. We live now in different times. Maybe Balenciaga is redrawing elegance for the digital age. It is just that in fashion, as in life, tomorrow never comes.

“I really like the idea of things of today — we don’t know about the future, the important thing is that it is for now,” said the Balmain designer Christophe Decarnin, citing inspiration from a classic 1971 outfit by Pierre Balmain and that famous symbol of not-so-low-key French style: the Palace of Versailles.

So almost as much gilding as in the famous Hall of Mirrors walked down the runway: gold brocade jackets with spray-on leather pants, gilded trousers worn with a papal purple coat, a dress with Las Vegas showgirl fringing at the breast and on the sleeves.

The setting was the (gilded) ballroom of the Grand Hotel with a vast crystal chandelier. But whereas previous Balmain shows have contrasted the venue with down-and-dirty, sexpot clothes with a rough military edge, Mr. Decarnin based this collection on a stereotype of Paris glamour.

No matter that V for Versace in the 1980s, rather than Versailles in the 1680s came to mind, as the models tossed their blond wash-and-go hair and Prince sang “Baby I’m a Star” on the soundtrack. It was the kind of collection that called for clichés like “gold standard” and “fringe benefits.”

Yet, even without any fashion innovation, Balmain has still caught a vibe. A taut pantsuit, with its short jacket resting on the derrière, the designer’s signature short party dresses with sharp shoulders and, above all, the gilt trip will feed the greedy maw of fast fashion — and give a lot of young women just what they want for right now.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

The Trouble With Milan





The Trouble With Milan


This season the road from the airport lounge to the fashion runway has been particularly short. After the “36 Hour Race” through the London shows, we survived a hectic and hysterical “Fashion Weekend” in Milan, where the calendar of presentations had been collapsed into three days of overlapping shows, impossible delays and events that went way into the night without any breaks for lunch or a sit-down dinner.

“Heritage” was the key word of the weekend — or “maturity” as Suzy Menkes put it in a slightly positive light. It all started with a strong show by Miuccia Prada who shopped deep into her closet and came out with the contemporary version of all her favorite clothes but with new proportions and lots of new fabrics. It continued successfully though the weekend with motorcycle leathers and color at Versace, tailoring and Sicilian lace at Dolce & Gabbana, heavy patchwork and jacquard knitwear at Missoni, sexy animal prints at Cavalli and military camel coats at MaxMara. Not a revolution, but for sure a reasonable evolution toward a more mature understanding of what women need.

Max Mara; Cavalli; MissoniAlberto Pellaschiar/AP; Alessandro Garofalo/Reuters; Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images Max Mara coats, Cavalli prints and Misson knits.

But the question remains: Did the condensed calendar help or damage the Italian fashion system?

For sure it did not help the few young or small designers who ended up showing at weird times, and who were forced to scramble to get good models, hair and makeup. A few independent designers with solid businesses and codified style, like Ermanno Scervino and Antonio Marras, are managing to hang in there, but there was not much new talent on display and the scene was not international at all. Francesco Scognamiglio, Marco De Vincenzo, Gabriele Colangelo — all winners of the Vogue New Talent Contest — were some exceptions, but usually in Milan young designers are all at work already for the big companies and they remain assistants for a very long time, before running abroad to spread their wings in Paris (think Stefano Pilati and Riccardo Tisci).

I should say that Milan felt more active and upbeat then usual — maybe because the traffic was stopped for a day in an effort to control the pollution. A few exhibitions, on view in the city’s public galleries, were worth more than a quick drive-by, like the Edo Period show at the Palazzo Reale and the Garbo show at the Triennale. Still, after more than 20 years of dominating the fashion scene with humongous budgets for advertising and individual designers’ events, Milan has not been able to build a fashion museum with a real program or a contemporary art museum worthy of international attention. The life of the city remains provincial, and not in a good sense! I often wonder why tourists and business people like today’s Milan when the Milanese escape their hometown as often as possible!

Does Milan deserve more than a long weekend? Probably. But a lot has to change with or without a different fashion calendar.

The problem with international fashion weeks and their legitimacy is a larger one now that fashion moves so fast and is a full-on entertainment machine. Are biannual fashion shows really the way to present fashion when stores need new merchandise every week? When there are so many collections presented throughout the year, when fragrances and other accessories and products are so important to the life of the brand, what does it mean to run across the planet to see similar collections over and over again every six months?

Shouldn’t we rethink the whole system and have fewer fashion weeks and instead more showroom meetings with buyers and fashion market editors? Shouldn’t designers take more time to really work on ideas and to research new fabrics and shapes and show only when they are ready and have something new to say? Shouldn’t their marketing teams make better use of the budgets for what really is significant to the life of the brand?

This is not just a Milan problem but an international one. It is a good problem because it indicates that we are part of a growing process. Fashion has become more and more important in our culture, and it has to play a more significant role in shaping the future of it. But it does take time. Surely more than a weekend.