I find it tacky, but tacky in the best possible way, deliciously over the top and vulgar and flashy and fun. A show like this simply screams FASHION. To me it almost seems like the idealized fantasy image of fashion that people who don't follow it have, you know? It's glamorous, it's decadent, it's ridiculous, it's dramatic, and it's above the every day.
Yes, delicious is the word!
I think you make an excellent point about this being like an idealised fantasy of fashion as a whole and I suppose that shows the enduring power of YSL, really?
Even people who don't really know who he was, or what he did, when they hear the word 'fashion' still have images like these appear in their minds.
I suppose if tacky can also be really good, I guess this could be considered to be
just a little bit tacky?!
I tend to only think of tacky as being a bad thing, though (maybe that says more about me, than the word?!), so I think I'd probably tend to call it a bit kitsch, or camp (as Marc did), rather than tacky, personally?
After all the wishy-washy, 'New Minimalism' (whatever the heck the 'New' refers to? Is that just an attempt to distance it from the minimalism of the very late '90s?), it's just such a relief to see something so strong, fun and utterly unapologetic, again!
Also, I've been vaguely obsessed with YSL, lately (particularly late '70s/early '80s YSL), so this and his signature line just feel right, to me.
I think Marc (like Miuccia) is very clever to stubbornly swim against the minimalist, ecru tide as, by doing so, they will pick up all the people who are utterly tired of it, too.
Much as I love Chloe's signature nude and blush tones, most designers simply don't do them very well and this made me beam broadly, in a way that ecru chiffon never will...