gallery presentation for one of the most talked about collections of the season.
Following the Berhard Willhelm stand, legendary Spanish designer Sibylla is back designing an amazing collection for Capucci. True craftmanship and amazing grace.
Just a few pictures here, please post if you turn up with more, and a review by fwd
Following the Berhard Willhelm stand, legendary Spanish designer Sibylla is back designing an amazing collection for Capucci. True craftmanship and amazing grace.
Just a few pictures here, please post if you turn up with more, and a review by fwd
Paris July 9, 2003 - "I don't do normal," smiled Franco Bruccoleri, the ebullient, high-energy Italian man-about-town and brains behind the re-launch of Capucci, at the amusing bash to debut the label's new eveningwear.
Several hundred stylists and editors, plus actresses Lou Doillon and Rossy De Palma and supermodel Audrey Marnay packed a large airy gallery in the Marais to see the evening looks designed by Sybilla, the Spanish designer Bruccoleri lured out of retirement to design the collection.
And Bruccoleri revealed to FWD that the house's future plans include a runway show next year. Its location: New York. "I think then we should be ready to take a good bite out of the Big Apple," laughed the experienced fashion player, who acquired the Capucci label two years ago.
In lieu of a runway show Wednesday in Paris, the Capucci event featured cool statues by Francois Berthoud, chamber music by a foursome hidden in a post-modern manner behind a screen and Sybilla's inventive updates on looks by Capucci.
Roberto Capucci, the boy wonder of Roman fashion, was famed for his "fabric sculptures," clothing with an almost architectural form that he presented in Rome's former Alta Moda season.
Setting this latest presentation in a gallery made sense, seeing as so much of Capucci's work ended up in museums. Sybilla's silk-lined designs are also highly wearable, albeit very arty, from the rectangular-shaped hems of silk dresses with multi-ribbed shoulders to the Grecian goddess columns with elongated collars. Her most brilliant look was a chiffon bustier done in black silk over rubberized paper, ideal for a medieval cartoon superhero.
The designer's most audacious idea was a coppery silk column with a necklace made of glass Murano baubles, thousands of which made up a giant Berthoud hanging suspended from the gallery's ceiling. The artist also created a massive Achimboldi-style face on a large table composed of multi-colored macaroons from Laduree.
"When I quit I swore I'd never come back unless I had fun. Well, with Franco everything is amusing," explained Sybilla, who met the retired Capucci in Rome earlier this year.
Capucci has already landed a dozen US clients, including Barneys, Alan Bilzerian in Boston and Maxfield in Los Angeles, for its ready-to-wear collection done by Bernard Wilhelm, which debuted in February in Milan.