Showing posts with label raf simons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label raf simons. Show all posts

Friday, April 13, 2012

THE WEEK IN FASHION: APRIL 9th-13th

Posted by Bethan Holt, Fashion Junior at Large

Those people at Dior at sneaky. While we were all comatose after our four day Easter weekend, they sprang upon us the news which we've been waiting for well over a year. Raf Simons is to succeed John Galliano as Creative Director at Christian Dior. Cathy Horyns broke the news for the New York Times. Of course, Twitter exploded and it wasn't long before thoughts turned to how Dior will look with Simons at the helm. The FashEd wrote about the great loves which have informed Raf's design vision until now. We can't wait for July, when Simons' first couture collection will be unveiled.

Raf to Dior (image from www.ology.com)
For quite some time, it was thought that Marc Jacobs may leave Louis Vuitton to take up the Dior role. Of course, he hasn't. Instead this week he's been celebrating his 49th birthday with a holiday in Rio. In fact, if you want to spy a designer taking time out then now is the time to keep an eye out at the world's loveliest beaches. The AW12 selling season is done and there's the whole Summer ahead to worry about SS13.

Marc rejoices in the waves as his boyfriend harry Louis looks on. (image from dailymail.co.uk)
So Marc has had free reign to frolic in the waves with his boyfriend Harry Louis and provide us with many lovely pics of their beach antics. Happy Birthday for Monday, Marc!

Marc with Amanda Lepore in 2006 (image from fashionologie.com)
While fashion's biggest vacancy has now been filled, there are still a few major designers without roles. Most notably, Stefano Pilati who left YSL after March's AW12 show to be replaced by Hedi Slimane. New whisperings this week suggest that Pilati may be recruited by Armani to take over from the eponymous designer who is now in his late 70s. Watch this space...

Stefano Pilati gets  hug from Chloe Sevingy(image from stylefrizz.com)
Daphne Guinness is donating pieces from her vast fashion collection to a Christies auction to launch and raise funds for The Isabella Blow foundation. Highlights include a silver dress which Lee McQueen made especially for Guinness in 2008. Apparently some of the items to be auctioned could sell for as  little as £300, what might that be? A Chanel button maybe? The Isabella Blow Foundation will raise funds to continue Issie's work, nurturing emerging from the art and fashion worlds.

Daphne Guinness in her bespoke McQueen dress which is expected to fetch up to £20,000 (image from vogue.co.uk)
There's still a couple of months to go before the UK goes into Jubilee and Olympic frenzy. The madness has already begun in advertising with every other TV and cinema ad featuring tenuous links to the activities. There are some perfectly delightful projects getting us geared up for a Summer of patriotism though. Harvey Nichols have transformed their windows into a mid-century tribute to Britain at the time of the Coronation. Luckily, the SS12 collections ladylike and pastel themes fit in very nicely. You nip into fishmongers "Nic's Plaice" for all trends nautical and mermaid-y while "Harvey Nickers" is the go-to for lacy prettiness. And it wouldn't be SS12 without Meadham Kirchhoff in the sweet shop.

Rodarte's Van Gogh dress takes pride of place in the greengrocers (image from telegraph.co.uk)

The mermaid at Nic's Plaice (image from telegraph.co.uk)

Meadham Kirchhoff"s sugary sweet shop (image from telegraph.co.uk)
Last week, I wrote about our culture of thinness and, more widely,  a disdain for women's bodies. This week, Ashley Judd,  a female celebrity who has been the subject of the media's wild judgements of her appearance, spoke out against the practise.

Ashley Judd, whose face has caused extensive speculation recently (image from www.thedailybeast.com)
Here's an extract from her lengthy piece, which is well worth reading in full:

"I hope the sharing of my thoughts can generate a new conversation: Why was a puffy face cause for such a conversation in the first place? How, and why, did people participate? If not in the conversation about me, in parallel ones about women in your sphere? What is the gloating about? What is the condemnation about? What is the self-righteous alleged “all knowing” stance of the media about? How does this symbolize constraints on girls and women, and encroach on our right to be simply as we are, at any given moment? How can we as individuals in our private lives make adjustments that support us in shedding unconscious actions, internalized beliefs, and fears about our worthiness, that perpetuate such meanness? What can we do as families, as groups of friends? Is what girls and women can do different from what boys and men can do? What does this have to do with how women are treated in the workplace?"

Should you be heading to LA this Summer, be sure to visit the new Herb Ritts: LA Style exhibition which is taking place at the Getty Centre. The legendary 1980s photographer was remembered by Naomi Campbell to The Guardian this week. Ritts may be best know for his stark and sculptural images of supermodels including Campbell, Christy Turlington and Cindy Crawford. I love the image below which captures the nude, intertwined bodies of some of the best know women of the time. 

Stephanie, Cindy, Christy, Tatjana, Naomi, Hollywood from 1989 by Herb Ritts (image from a selection on the Guardian.)
The Great Scrunchie Debate, first ignited when Carrie screwed her nose up at a tourist's choice of ponytail binding in Sex and the City series 6, has been revisited this week with the 'news' that American Secretary of State, Hilary Clinton's aides would like her to keep her to put way her beloved scrunchies. Sartorially speaking, it's probably fair to say that Ms. Clinton probably has more in common with a tourist from Georgia than fashion obsessed Carrie. However, what with the current trend for a 80s/90s street rave look, a scrunchie could be a rather nice addition to the look. Really, it's all in the styling. I like the experiments of the girls from Elle- scrunchies are not so bad as Clinton's colleagues might make out, but perhaps not teamed with Carolina Herrera trouser suits in the same colour. 

Hilary Clinton works the scrunchie (image from www.politico.com)
Scrunchies for now- image from www.sweetandsound.co.uk
Ginnifer Goodwin works the Margot the catwalk way (image from glamour.com)
Coleen rocks the Margot at Aintree (image from daily mail)
Roksanda Ilincic's wonderful Margot dress- in bright fuchsia with bell sleeves- has been tipped to be the dress of this season, having sold out 80 times over (and maybe more) by now at Matches. Cute American actress Ginnifer Goodwin was recently seen it it and the FashEd tells me that a few of her editor friends are also proud owners. Basically, it was all going so well. Until yesterday that it is, when Coleen Rooney rocked up to the first day of Aintree clad in her very own Margot dress. Rather than retaining Ilincic's looser, longer and more chic catwalk styling Coleen had chosen a version which was short and tight. While we love that Coleen is supporting London designers, to our eye she made the Margot into a whole new dress. Of course, this is actually proof that it IS the dress of the season, but thankfully, when it fits right the look is so different it might as well be another garment. Will some cool girl please come and revive Margot's reputation?


Finally video of the week goes to Gia Coppola's (niece of Sophia) short and kooky and lovely film to mark the collaboration between DVF and Current Elliott. It's called Writer's Block and tells the story of a young and beautiful screen writer and her, er, writer's block. The music, by Robert Schwartzman, another relative, gives it a kind of 60s horror film drama. And the clothes are lovely too, modelled throughout by the film's star Tracy Antonopolous. It's definitely a refreshing take on the DVF brand.






Tuesday, April 10, 2012

RAF SIMONS FOR CHRISTIAN DIOR: WHAT IS HE REALLY LIKE, AND WHAT CAN WE EXPECT?

Posted by Melanie Rickey,  Fashion Editor at Large

Belgian modernist Raf Simons was announced as Creative Director of Christian Dior yesterday, thus bringing to a close the biggest fashion recruitment drama since Tom Ford left the Gucci job vacant back in 2004.

“It is with the utmost respect for its tremendous history, its unparalleled knowledge and craftsmanship that I am joining the magnificent house of Dior. Mr. Christian Dior has always been for me the most inspiring couturier,” Simons said in a statement today. “I am truly humbled and honored to become artistic director of the most celebrated French house in the world.”

His is a truly fascinating and forward thinking appointment that can only mean very fresh and exciting times ahead for Christian Dior's overall women and men's business. Not least because of the stark differences between Dior's former Kingpin John Galliano and the incoming Simons who will put on his first Dior show for the Haute Couture in July.

As designers and personalities, John and Raf are chalk and cheese. While John Galliano is a dramatic, historical dress-loving romantic and rough diamond geezer genius, Raf Simons is -  according to those I've spoken to who have worked directly with him - a clinically organised, philosophically minded and deeply emotional man who relishes process and is in a thrall to form, contemporary art and modernity.

Not to mention that one of his favourite ever albums is The XX's amazing 2009 debut, and that the fashion designers he considers his "main people" of influence are Martin Margiela and Helmut Lang in the contemporary arena, and historically Dior and Balenciaga. These traits sit well with Raf Simons' status as one of the world's most highly regarded menswear designers.  His recent women's collections for Jil Sander have been massively influential and critically acclaimed, yet not widely bought and worn.

Raf Simons shot by Willy Vanderperre for W Magazine

For the last two months I've had tear sheets from the March 2012 edition of W Magazine up on my pinboard; a wonderful story Raf worked on with Alice Rawsthorn, the design critic of the International Herald Tribune, called "What Makes Raf Run?".  In the story he details to Alice his lifelong obsessions from music to art to furniture and even the fashion show that moved him to tears.

I have spent all morning reading more deeply about and viewing the work of the artist, ceramicist, furniture designer, film-maker and architect Raf loves, listened to the music he craves and got to know the available multi-layers of the man and his aesthetic taste and have been utterly inspired and shaken awake by the whole experience. Later in this post he talks about a day he drove around L.A to find John Lautner designed houses; I did exactly the same thing a few years ago to see Lautner and Frank Lloyd Wright houses, and went one further booking appointments with estate agents to view one or two, ending up in an awesome empty Lloyd Wright house that was crumbling like Grey Gardens.

All this provides a fascinating insight into the man, and gives tantalising clues into what we may expect to inform his new era at Christian Dior. Certainly from a cultural point of view the brand of Christian Dior is about to a have an earthquake of newness flushed through its veins. I can't wait. In the meantime, meet Raf Simons.

 RAF LOVES HARDCORE TECHNO MUSIC
Raf's Favourite EVER Album. Consumed, by Plastikman. A bit of trance, not for dancing. Press PLAY and listen while you read.

"I’m a club kid at heart, and not a day goes by that I don’t listen to Plastikman, aka Richie Hawtin. I first saw Richie years ago, when I was 20-something, at I Love Techno, one of the huge live events we have in Belgium that 60,000 or 70,000 kids go to. He is such a master: the hardest, the best, technologically the most innovative. He grew up near Detroit, so he’s connected to the innovators there, though he spends a lot of time in Berlin now. For years I have had a total obsession with Kraftwerk, and I think Richie is the Kraftwerk of today."

RAF LOVES STERLING RUBY'S ART
SP58 by Sterling Ruby, 2008 Acrylic and spray paint on canvas/ (via The Saatchi Gallery)

"I started to look at art when I was really, really young—long before I discovered design and fashion—but I didn’t collect it until I began teaching at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna in 2000. It was a side job, so I thought I’d use the extra money to buy art, and I decided early on to buy work only from artists of my generation. There were different people coming up at the time, and one of them was Sterling Ruby. He is the artist that I collect the most, and I am very, very happy to have a daily confrontation with it. His work touches so many different disciplines—collage, photography, painting, sculpture, performance. Often you don’t know what you are looking at, but it goes into my head, and it doesn’t come out.”

RAF LOVES MICHAEL CLARK'S CHOREOGRAPHY
Michael Clark dancers in the David Bowie tribute  (Will Vanderperre via W Magazine) 

"I discovered Michael Clark in i-D magazine when I was 17 or 18, probably because of his links to Mark E. Smith’s band the Fall. For years I only knew Michael’s work from images; eventually I started to look at films of it on the Internet, but I never saw it live. Last summer I was curating an event for Mercedes in Berlin and realised that I would love for Michael to do something for it. Eventually he said, “Okay, I’ll do it as a tribute to David Bowie.” It brought the whole thing together for me. I didn’t go to the rehearsal. I wanted to wait for the performance, and when I saw it, I found it mind-blowing. So punk. So anarchic. So sculptural. And I was very, very impressed ­technically: The projections were amazing, and Stevie Stewart’s costumes were beautiful. My friends were so moved that some of them were crying. Me too! I cried three times."


RAF CRIED AT MARTIN MARGIELA'S THIRD SHOW 
Shots from the 1989 playground show by Martin Margiela. From the Maison Martin Margiela book ( Rizzoli 2009)
"The main people for me when I started to look at fashion were Martin Margiela and Helmut Lang.  Historically, Dior and Balenciaga influenced me the most. Nothing in fashion, though, has had more emotional impact on me than Martin Margiela’s third show. It was 1989, and I was an intern for Walter Van Beirendonck.  Martin’s show was in a playground. They’d asked the kids’ parents for permission to use the playground, and they said, “Yes, but only if our kids can come.” The models appeared in long white clothes, and suddenly the kids started to play with them. It was so moving. Everyone was crying. Me too. Martin is the one who made me decide to do fashion—and when he left fashion, I decided to collect his clothes. I know his collections inside out, so I started to build an archive of them alongside my own."

RAF IS ADDICTED TO COLLECTING CERAMICS 
Work by Valentine Schlegel (courtesy Galerie Jacques Lacoste/Mathieu Ferrier)

"I’ve always liked ceramics. The craft is so simple: earth, hands, water. It sounds so stupid to say it, but making something all by yourself with few ingredients can be very powerful. When I started to read books on the subject, I discovered Valentine Schlegel. Her work is beyond genius. It specifically expresses everything I love about ceramics from that period: It has a roughness, along with something sculptural, always in very weird shapes, inspired by seeds and plants. Her work wasn’t industrialized, and she made very little. I only have one piece by her. For years I have been looking for more, but they’re impossible to find." 

RAF ADORES JOHN LAUTNER'S ARCHITECTURE (ME TOO)
"Chemosphere" by John Lautner (via John Lautner Foundation


"The first time I went to Los Angeles, I was determined to see John Lautner’s house, the Chemosphere, so I rented a car. And for two hours we drove up and down Mulholland Drive trying to find it. Eventually I called a friend, the L.A. gallerist Marc Foxx, and he said, “It’s up there. Just look up and you’ll see it.” I was sitting in the car staring up at the hills, and then suddenly there it was.
I like how he integrates furniture into his architecture: Often it’s embedded right into the house, with sofas growing out of the concrete. I find that really beautiful, along with the inside-outside feel of his work. It’s very Americano, of course—but I like Americano."

For the full W Article go here


Monday, February 27, 2012

STEFANO PILATI OUT AT YSL, HEDI SLIMANE OR RAF SIMONS IN?

Posted by Fashion Editor at Large

Hedi  (via: wwd)

Suzy Menkes has acted like she has known for months; and finally it has been made official by the house: Stefano Pilati is leaving Yves Saint Laurent. His contract is up in one month, and the suits at Pinault-Printemps-Redoute have not renewed his contract. Though on a positive note, his Paris show next week (March 5th) will be his swansong; cue sobs and weeping from the fashion press and an outpouring of emotion similar to the scenes at Jil Sander this weekend. I will also expect a highly collectible collection. 

So why is Stefano out? The informed thinking in Paris is that the PPR bosses didn't think his work was up there in the brilliance stakes, and his collections occasionally seemed very laboured; anyone remember that disastrous scene in The September Issue? They also allegedly didn't like the way Stefano conducted himself socially, with a general implication that he was back to his old ways (he has been open about his drink and drug habits in the past, like in this interview with Vice). Or perhaps after eight years as Creative Director of Yves Saint Laurent, and with founder of the house Mr Saint Laurent long since dead, it is simply time for fresh energy to inject new life into the reputation of the house, which in turn will boost sales.

Commenting on the announcement, Yves Saint Laurent Chief Executive Officer Paul Deneve said 'We are all at Yves Saint Laurent grateful to Stefano for his important achievements in advancing the mission and success of this historic and treasured fashion house.' 

Kate and Stefano Pilati (via Fashionista) 

It is expected that one of two men will take up the post at Yves Saint Laurent. The favoured contender has long been Hedi Slimane the highly creative designer, photographer and art director who ran YSL menswear with a very specific vision from 2001 to 2007. He is in line to oversee the entire creative side of Yves Saint Laurent, an opportunity he hinted he has been waiting for

Raf Simons sheds a tear as he takes to the runway for his second encore at his last Jil Sander show at the weekend 

Also now in the frame is 44 year old Belgian modernist Raf Simons who is leaving Jil Sander this week following news that Jil Sander herself is to return to the label. Rumour has it he was fired because industry gossip about him leaving for Dior had gone into overdrive, and Simons in fact has no job to go to. Whatever the truth of the matter, the fashion industry seems mired in the thought that Mr Simons is headed to Christian Dior. But though it is an outside possibility, just how PERFECT would the art and architecture minded designer be for the house of Yves Saint Laurent? Personally, I would camp out to be among the first to own a Raf Simons for Yves Saint Laurent piece. I don't think I would feel the same about a Raf Simons for Dior item; and I'm sure I'm not alone in this.  

What Stefano does next will also be something the fashion world will wait for with interest. Stefano is a totally lovely and talented man, and I am sure he can emerge with his head held high from all of this.