It seems Ricardo Tisci has been already presenting his collection, there´s already a description from Suzy Menkes at the New York times:
For Givenchy , the designer Riccardo Tisci demands total privacy, offering 10 delicate, intricate dresses to his clients in the intimacy of a salon. That spirit was enhanced by this season’s subject: Kazuo Ohno, the legendary Japanese Butoh dancer, who died last year at age 103.
Mixing that inspiration with the helmets of the Japanese Goldrake robots, Mr. Tisci’s imagination produced the most slender and delicate dresses, using Japanese cranes as symbols and abstractions of an obi sash in leather. With strikingly contrasting backs that might be fuchsia bright compared to a barely tinted front, or with tiny pearls covered with silk, these dresses were works of art — one requiring 4,000 hours of handwork.
Mr. Tisci’s lyrical vision of haute couture, although with no visible reference to the origins of the Givenchy house, was a first for him, with none of the black of his more familiar gothic spirit. The sense of body skimming lightness would be quite beautiful on anyone rich enough and thin enough to order a dress.
No pictures thought yet, damn!