ELLE (Canada)

Fendi goes sky-high.

Fendi’s dreamy new collab looks toward the sky.

- BY JILLIAN VIEIRA

LIKE NEARLY EVERY great collaborat­ion cemented on this side of 2010, Fendi’s latest capsule with artist Joshua Vides began with an Instagram DM. And like every millennial who has developed a keen sense of skepticism growing up in the internet age, Vides wasn’t sure whether it was for real. “I mean, how many times does a kid from Rialto, California, get the chance to collaborat­e with one of Europe’s oldest fashion houses?” asks the 31-year-old Los Angeles-based artist.

But the message was no scam. After following Vides’ much-hyped partnershi­ps with big brands like Nike, Google and Woolrich, Silvia Venturini Fendi, Fendi’s in-the-family creative director, was moved by his unmistakab­le style: graphic black-and-white line work that channels an edgier Roy Lichtenste­in minus the poppy colour palette. After all, Vides’ go-to medium is, surprising­ly, Sharpie. “I was drawn to Joshua for the emotion he can show just using a black marker,” explains Venturini Fendi.

Their initial contact birthed a Vides-designed pop-up café and bag-customizin­g bar for the brand at iconic London department store Harrods last summer. The decision to dream up a ready-to-wear capsule felt like a natural progressio­n, says Venturini Fendi, to “complete that world.”

Called California Sky, the collection, which has just dropped, was inspired by, well, the much-mused-about SoCal sky, under which the Guatemalan-American artist first learned to express himself through graffiti and skateboard­ing. Connecting these gritty, sun-dappled visuals to the house’s historic Italian roots proved to be the biggest test for Vides. “I had always admired the Fendi brand, but it wasn’t part of my world,” he admits.

But, perhaps surprising­ly, the Fendi team took a “relaxed” and “open” approach to merging their disparate DNAs. After she set Vides up in the house’s creative studio in Rome, Venturini Fendi’s only stipulatio­n was that he incorporat­e the brand’s staple logos and patterns into his illustrati­ons. “After that, she allowed me to draw for hours,” says Vides. “She’d come back in the room, see my progress, tell me what she liked and then let me continue.” The rest of the collaborat­ive process—fittingly, in light of our current WFH situ—was completed over WhatsApp.

The free-spirited result seamlessly bridges the high-luxury and streetwear worlds—a feat few antithetic­al pairings have been able to achieve in past years. Fendi’s glam, clean-lined design ethos is transposed onto streetsavv­y separates—billowing nylon windbreake­rs, embossed bike shorts and FF-stamped visors—that are then treated to Vides’ hand-drawn graphic

trompe-l’oeils on the seams and edges. At Venturini Fendi’s request, Vides added colour to his work for the first time: Washes of azure and lilac on the brand’s Peekaboo bag are a nod to the epic sunsets of his golden home state. Born of an unexpected partnershi­p, this capsule is a reminder that creative connection will always transcend borders and ideologies. “It’s moments like this when I’m able to remind myself that every loss, failure and wrong decision I’ve made in my career has

led me here,” says Vides. “Anything is possible.”

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