Thursday, July 5, 2012

Genderclash! Jean Paul Gaultier HC F/W 12.13


PARIS, July 4, 2012
By Tim Blanks
There's little doubt that posterity will recognize Jean Paul Gaultier as one of the all-time greats, but it will also have to recognize the profligacy of his genius, the carelessness with mere bagatelles like timekeeping (the 90-minute wait today bordered on those interminable delays that were a signature of the house 20 years ago), the way the extravagantly throwaway has always shared catwalk space with fiercely disciplined, beautifully crafted clothes. Haute couture has indulged both those impulses to an extreme for the designer, so the pendulum swing of consensus on his couture is unsurprisingly determined by which impulse dominates. Today, mercifully, it was discipline and craft.

That's probably what happens when you have a presiding spirit as wayward as Pete Doherty, the voice on the soundtrack, the star of Sylvie Verheyde's adaptation of nineteenth century poet Alfred de Musset's Confession of a Child of the Century, which was the spark of the collection. Once you'd ascertained (thank you, Wiki!) that de Musset's grand amour was the novelist George Sand, who scandalized mid-nineteenth century Paris by wearing men's clothes and smoking in public, Gaultier's collection slotted with the greatest of ease into his series of salutes to everything that has ever made Paris so justifiably full of itself. Erin O'Connor opened the show as Sand, in top hat, tailcoat, and gentleman's fob. She was followed by a set of Gaultier's peerless meditations on Le Smoking, including a silhouette that quoted Dior's Bar silhouette. It was never a secret that Gaultier would have been a logical candidate for the top job at Dior when Galliano got the gig. This season, when Dior is once again the big story with the Simons ascendancy, there was a certain poignancy in such reminders of that long-ago dream.

But Gaultier went on to prove how he owns his decadent, romantic, polymorphous fashion sensibility. Sand's tailcoat came back time and again, in crocodile, in camel, in the "male couture" that Gaultier inserted with a wincing lack of subtlety, and in the bridal finale, where the tails were splayed across a white skirt in front while the lapels were extended into swan's wings in back. The designer also paraded silken kimono-styled eveningwear that conveyed the fin de siècle feel of outfits named after characters from Proust, Huysmans, and Wilde. The colors—absinthe, coral, gold, papal purple—were the colors of opium dreams. Gaultier amplified the Beaux Arts mood by including a couple of articulated automatons. They could have been the robot from Metropolis. Or maybe they were sisters of the Georges Méliès creation that featured in Martin Scorsese's Hugo. Better that way—Gaultier's collections are always a love song to Paris.


Erin O'Connor

Frida Gustavsson

Thana Kuhnen

Tanel Bedrossiantz

Karlie Kloss

Yulia Kharlapanova

Maria Hashleva

Asia Bugajska

Alana Zimmer

Milagros Schmoll


Anmari Botha

Andrej Pejic

Querelle Jansen

Constance Jablonski

Georgina Stojilkovic 
Lakshmi Menon

Lindsey Wixson

Catherine McNeil





Sigrid Agren

Willy Cartier

Sui He

Erin O'Connor

Kate Kondas

Ginta Lapina

Frida Gustavsson

Alana Zimmer

Julia Schoenberg


Morgane Dubled

Tanel Bedrossiantz


Anmari Botha

Constance Jablonski


Willy Cartier

Querelle Jansen

Karlie Kloss


Lakshmi Menon


Yulia Kharlapanova

Maria Kashleva

Catherine McNeil


Asia Bugajska

Lindsey Wixson

Kate Kondas

Georgina Stojilkovic

Sui He

Andrej Pejic

Milagros Schmoll

Thana Kuhnen

Hanaa Ben Abdesslem


2 comments:

  1. Mixed feelings on this. I love some of the pieces but I feel they would look better moving than in pictures. Some of the silhouettes are boxy and odd. I'm also not a fan of all the sheer. But I'll have to think about it.

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  2. Sheer is the one common thread in almost all the couture shows this season. Even Elie Saab dropped the lining under his embellished dresses. Strange trend for Fall/Winter.

    I like a lot of pieces. There is surprising beauty in some of the dresses. I like the final looks of Querelle Jansen and Sui He, and I love the turquoise getup on Ginta. I love the velvet pants on the men, especially if they have muscled thighs. I like that it's androgynous in texture, but flattering for manly shapes. In general though, I watch JPG for entertainment.

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