Photography by Vito Flamminio
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Gareth Pugh’s S/S 09 collection, his first since
winning the
ANDAM prize, gave the first great jolt to Paris Fashion Week with a show that
retained his precise point of view but stunned naysayers with the
slickness of
its presentation. An industrial space at the Palais De Tokyo with light
filtering through the glass ceiling and emanating from fluoresecent
tubes on the ground, was
an unusually bright venue for a
Gareth Pugh show but as the music
cranked up, and
the first model stomped out in the first of a series of perfectly articulated
armour, rendered in a strictly monochrome palette, the same old energy
and
excitement of his London shows came roaring back. Pugh explained this
choice of
venue backstage after the show, “I was happy to show it in a house! But
Rick
(Owens, mentor) suggested the Palais De Tokyo. We knew that coming to Paris that we
had to step
it up.”
It was a fascinating, ambitious show that explored
his
ongoing fascination with architecture and dramatic silhouettes, in a
way that
recalled Margiela’s attempts to provide a superhuman dimension to the
human
body. Styled by Dazed’s own Katie Shillingford, the warrior women of
the show
included some of the biggest names in modelling and came adorned with
black and
white eyelashes, latex leggings and two tone wedges, their hair scraped
back,
ready for battle. It was a study of contrasts - exaggerrated
Shakespearean ruffs
were paired with futuristic body armour, black played off white.
If one
thought of Star Wars as a reference, Pugh cited a more classical source
for
inspiration, “I was thinking of Millais’ painting of Ophelia where you
can’t tell
if she’s drowning or rising from the water.”
The
fabrics this season were lighter (“Well, it IS
Spring/ summer!” he exclaimed) and even included chiffon among the
leather and
plastic. There was also a softening of his diamond-hard aesthetic and a
sense of romance creeping in, with
some very desirable and wearable pieces amongst the high drama, as a result of having his garments produced in the same factory as
Rick Owens. On the
basis of
this powerful showing, Pugh could very well be joining McQueen and
Galliano in that
elite clique of highly idiosyncratic British auteurs making a mark at
Paris
Fashion Week