The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Liberate men with satin and corsets — Fashion icon Galliano

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PARIS: John Galliano set out on Friday to redefine 21st-century masculinit­y with corsets, sensual satins and vinyl trousers to “liberate” men from their sartorial shackles.

The British designer’s new collection for Maison Margiela at Paris men’s fashion week not only blurred the lines between genders, but blew them away with shiny pink ribbon belts and a

haute couture decadence that rarely treads the male catwalk.

Inspired by genderless fashion boutiques now springing up in London and elsewhere, Galliano put out a podcast to explain how he is plotting to release men from the straitjack­ets of suits and streetwear. “I have been questionin­g myself, and I’ve been trying to redefine what it means to be masculine today,” he said. The designer urged men to learn from women how to feel both classy and comfortabl­e. The creator, who revolution­ised Dior and Givenchy before his fall from grace after a drunken antiSemiti­c outburst in 2011, said fine tailoring cut on the bias could be

You feel really relaxed in it... it’s very fluid but still smart. Still chic.You don’t feel waistbands and you don’t feel canvas or a stiffness. It’s just like wearing a T-shirt. That’s the feeling.

the key to revolution­ising men’s wardrobes with a new sexier, freer feel.

“It’s mercurial, like liquid to wear,” Galliano said. “It’s as easy as wearing no clothes. It’s that liberating.”

He said he was struck by its effect when he was doing the fitting with his models.

“All my girlfriend­s have experience­d it, but to the young dudes I’m doing the fittings on it’s a revelation. It’s just so light. The feeling of a waistband or tailoring cutting into you is gone.”

Galliano, 57, who has been at the head of the label created by the highly influentia­l Belgian maverick Martin Margiela since 2014, said sartorial rules may be about to be overturned like social taboos.

He said he is surrounded by young people in his studio and “for them gay marriage is a historical event, the abolition of the ban on abortion in Ireland is history. It’s a completely different mindset,” he told the podcast, “The Memory of... With John Galliano”.

With languid satin suits cut loose and worn with nothing underneath, tweed Saville Row style suits of English tweed and embroidere­d kimono jumpsuits, Galliano mixed gender-bending David Bowie looks from the 1970s with a more futuristic Japanese vibe.

The designer said people’s body language changes with clothes cut on the bias. “You feel really relaxed in it... it’s very fluid but still smart. Still chic. You don’t feel waistbands and you don’t feel canvas or a stiffness. It’s just like wearing a T-shirt. That’s the feeling,” he earlier told Women’s Wear Daily. Bringing home Bacon Galliano often cut on the bias at Dior and Givenchy but the technique has rarely been used in menswear.

Fellow British designer Sarah Burton took inspiratio­n from the Anglo-Irish artist Francis Bacon — no mean dresser in his day — for her Alexander McQueen show, with a few striking takes on his famous black leather coat.

Burton had a lot of fun with the raincoat and pin-striped suit, those traditiona­l staples of the British gentleman’s and Bacon’s own rakish wardrobe, experiment­ing with garments that were half raincoat and half suit and vice versa.

The artist’s palette of searing reds, blacks and blues were painted across coats and biker jackets, while his spidery motifs were echoed in chalk and charcoal effect motifs and in some spectacula­r silver embroidery. — AFP

John Galliano, fashion icon

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 ??  ?? Galliano speaks onstage during Vogue’s Forces of Fashion Conference last Oct 12, in New York City. — AFP file photo
Galliano speaks onstage during Vogue’s Forces of Fashion Conference last Oct 12, in New York City. — AFP file photo

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