disco54
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2006
- Messages
- 5,041
- Reaction score
- 2,345
Ay, there's the rub.
From the Berge Foundation's 2010 monograph: People instantly realized they were being projected back to the 1940s. The critics slammed the collection. "Nauseating," said the Daily Telegraph, and the Guardian called it "a tour de force of bad taste." "A cold shower," clamed Paris-Jour; "women at their worst," concluded the Daily Sketch. But it was Eugenia Sheppard who wrote the most famous putdown of all: "The Ugliest Show in Town". Pierre-Yves Guillen, meanwhile, was the most vitrolic. "What arrogance to think that, like sheep penned in a concentration camp, we would applaud when we saw good taste sent to the slaughter, elegance consigned to a mass grave, glamour dispatched to the ovens".
Mind you, all this Fuss about a style of clothing already in existence, saved and forgotten, sold off and discarded, picked through and revived, worn by young women who had no idea or did and couldn't care less. Why is that not Luxury?
Why aren't we asking bigger questions about who gets to decide on what should and should not be shown? We are all aware of Mr. Slimane's design skills, it's impact cannot be erased. I think, despite how I personally feel about his latest efforts, that he deserves the benefit of the doubt, if such a thing exists. He went the more typical luxury route for the house when he helmed its menswear the first time around; youtube shows gold leathers, redheads, bikini briefs, sleeveless trenches und so weiter.
I would say this is more about irony, in celebrating and reviving a style that was at its essence anti-fashion. Didn't Courtney Love burn those Perry Ellis grunge pieces that Marc Jacobs sent her? Mr. Slimane essentially wants to dress the very people he never could or never will, those who are unaffected, immune to the fashion circus.
Those who are immune to the "fashion circus" lol, do not pay high fashion prices, they go to bargain bins and thrift shops, so your argument, I am sorry to say makes no sense.
in terms of their importance to contemporary culture.
, you've got it exactly. He is not interested in the customer who would be attracted to the label, who would pay high fashion prices. He is after what he cannot have; Olivier Zahm commented on this kinds of fantasy aspect to the collection, this longing, this desire for what is no longer, for what never existed, at least in France. I think this Longing, this Striving is very Yves.
omg
.. but hey..

