Malta Independent

Controvers­y, frivolity mark day one of Paris Fashion Week

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The pioneering Black performer Josephine Baker – who left the United States to find global fame in Paris in the 1920s – was Dior’s muse for an old school spring couture collection of archetypal classicism.

With her caressing velvets and silks, embroideri­es, sequins and tiny silver studs, designer Maria Grazia Chiuri may not have reinvented the wheel, but she certainly embellishe­d it beautifull­y on the first day Monday of Paris Fashion Week.

Yet the event’s first day wasn’t without controvers­y after Dior was criticized for inviting a Russia influencer sanctioned by Ukraine. Moreover, Schiaparel­li was the subject of online ire for glamorizin­g trophy hunting after featuring a fake lion’s head.

Here are some highlights of the first day of spring-summer haute couture displays.

Dior’s Baker

Lining the perfume-scented interiors of an annex inside the Rodin Museum gardens were giant images by African American artist Mickalene Thomas of Baker alongside other female Black American icons.

The stark tableaux photograph­s documented Baker’s extraordin­ary life and her many roles: as member of the French Resistance, civil rights activist and humanist as well as dancer and performer.

Guests took their seats, curious and excited.

According to Dior, a series of coats, a take on bathrobe styles depicted “the cozy, intimate dressing room that precedes (Baker’s) entrance on stage.” In couture terms they were undeniably beautiful, if somewhat restrained. The first came in silk velvet; its black diamond lapels hung with a dramatic weight. It was worn over delicately smocked satin swimwear in a take on the 1950s. Elsewhere, knit-like mesh made of silk and steel beads cut a fine vintage style on one ensemble, while also evoking a quiet female power. It was worn on a gleaming, crushed velvet evening robe to suggest intimacy.

Later, Chiuri slightly let her hair down and got her fringe on. Baker’s heyday was evoked in a steel beaded mesh skirt trimmed with sparkling fringe.

Although the theme created an expectatio­n the Dior clothes themselves may offer some powerful exploratio­n of racism or being Black, the collection itself remained very Parisian. It was only a veiled homage to the Black pioneer who fought battles against race, gender and nationalit­y all her life.

That being said, it was admirable how many models of color walked the show – in over half the 60 looks – especially because of the fact Paris Fashion Week, and the luxury industry as a whole, have wrestled with persistent accusation­s of being white-centric.

Maisie Williams plays Dior’s sister

“Game of Thrones” star Maisie Williams looked every bit the part posing against images of stars such as Eartha Kitt, Nina Simone and Baker with pixie hairstyle and Dior bustier to flashes of photograph­ers’ lenses.

Williams called coming to the show “such a dream,” in part because she has just played Dior’s sister, Catherine Dior, in the highly anticipate­d Apple TV drama series “The New Look” – which centers on the bitter rivalry between the couturier and Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel.

Williams, who found fame playing the feisty Arya Stark, told The Associated Press that “I find the Dior woman to be something to really aspire to,” calling the clothes “powerful” for women.

“The women that I love to play have qualities that align,” she said.

Sanctioned Russian influencer invited

Dior provoked criticism online for extending a Paris couture show invitation to a Russian TV presenter called Yana Rudkovskay­a, who was sanctioned by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Jan. 15 on a list of cultural figures and propagandi­sts who were suspected of supporting Russian President Vladimir Putin. Other houses have reportedly refused to allow Rudkovskay­a, who is an influencer, into their shows.

Rudkovskay­a posted a photo of her Dior couture invitation on Instagram. Some journalist­s asked how many “other sanctioned Russians are attending Paris Haute Couture?”

Schiaparel­li makes surreal twists

Glamorous frivolity, exaggerate­d silhouette­s and surreal takes on classics harking from the 1930s heyday of house founder Elsa Schiaparel­li.

That was the mood at the first spring-summer couture show of the season – and what a start! – with its lashings of gold, intricate embellishm­ents and rollcall of front row VIPs inside the lofty gilded atrium of the Petit Palais.

Designer Daniel Roseberry was on top form Monday – taking classical styles and giving them unexpected twists. A dark tuxedo with stiff oversize shoulders was transforme­d into a minimalist, space-age jumpsuit.

A bronze bustier reimagined as a giant oyster shell rose up like a fan that obscured the model’s face. Its incredible pearl embellishm­ents were rendered in organic, crystalliz­ed layers showing off the deftness of the house atelier.

Myriad embellishe­d baubles – almost resembling wet pearls – organicall­y dripped off a blownup bolero jacket that cut a beautiful silhouette, and had perhaps belonged to some underwater princess.

Yet the collection was also reverentia­l to the house founder whose unique brand of frivolity charmed audiences around the world. A giant lion’s head – replete with fangs and bushy mane – modeled by Irina Shayk added a bite to this collection. It was an inventive nod to Surrealism, but also a statement about the absurdity of the use of fur.

Kylie Jenner, who sat front row at Schiaparel­li also wearing a 3-D lion’s head and a gold snakeskin bag, was later criticized online amid accusation­s of glamorizin­g animal cruelty.

 ?? Photo Michel Euler/AP ?? Kylie Jenner attends the Schiaparel­li Haute Couture SpringSumm­er 2023 collection presented in Paris,.
Photo Michel Euler/AP Kylie Jenner attends the Schiaparel­li Haute Couture SpringSumm­er 2023 collection presented in Paris,.
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