The Manila Times

GLOBAL FASHION IN THE TIME OF COVID-19

Gucci, Saint Laurent seek radical redo of fashion calendars

- BY COLLEEN BARRY AND THOMAS ADAMSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

SOAVE, Italy: Gucci and Saint Laurent are two of the highest profile luxury fashion houses to announce they will leave the fashion calendar behind, with its relentless four-times-a-year rhythm, shuttling cadres of fashionist­as between global capitals where they squeeze shoulder-to-shoulder around runways for 15 breathless minutes.

The coronaviru­s lockdown, which has hit luxury fashion houses on their bottom lines, has also given pause to rethink the pace of fashion, offering the possibilit­y to return to less hectic, more considered periods of creativity and production — and perhaps consumptio­n.

Gucci creative director Alessandro Michele imagines a twice yearly appointmen­ts — one in the fall and one in the spring — to present co-ed collection­s, getting away from the hyped-up calendar which has come to require pre-season collection­s before the major women’s and men’s runway shows and a one-off cruise collection, increasing­ly in exotic locations.

“Two appointmen­ts a year are more than enough to give time to form a creative thought, and to give more time to this system,” Michele said in a video conference this week, expanding on an idea he launched over the weekend in a series of Instagram posts from his own lockdown diaries.

The virus-imposed shutdown — while stopping production and consumptio­n that feed the fashion cycle — also recharged creativity among those who found new time for reflection. “It is a great gift that our planet gave us, a great gift that cannot be discarded,’’ Michele said.

Michele said he hopes that a new calendar and new rhythms would be decided within the fashion system and in cooperatio­n with other designers.

It has been clear for the last few years that the fashion world has been suffering under the current pace: More luxury houses have been combining men’s and women’s shows as genderless and even “seasonless” dressing becomes a global theme; it hasn’t been unheard-of for major brands to skip a season or to venture away from their fashion cities to expand their audience.

Saint Laurent hasn’t articulate­d its intentions, but said in a statement in April that it would “take control” of the fashion schedule “conscious of the current circumstan­ces and its waves of radical change.” Luxury fashion was one of the first industries to show suffer from coronaviru­s, first with the China shutdown that closed boutiques and blocked travelers already in January from a region responsibl­e for a third of global luxury. And the pandemic appeared in Europe just as Fall-Winter 2020-21 shows were underway in Milan and then Paris. Illustrati­ng just how vulnerable the show system is in the face of a fastspread­i n g global virus , Giorgio Armani s h owed his collection in a closed theater on Fe b r u a r y 23 — just two days after Italy became the first Western country with a coronaviru­s outbreak.

Armani also has called for a major rethink of changes in luxury fashion during his 45 years as a stalwart of Milan fashion.

In a letter to Women’s Wear Daily also in April, Armani said he found it “immoral” for luxury fashion to adopt the pace of fast fashion — the drive to deliver more in pursuit of profits “yet forgetting that luxury takes time, to be achieved and to be appreciate­d.” That has included moves toward see-now, buy-now capsule collection­s by some brands, running in direct opposition to his notions of “timeless elegance.”

“It makes no sense for one of my jackets or suits to live in the shop for three weeks before becoming obsolete, replaced by new goods that are not too different,” Armani said.

Armani, who opened his Milan boutiques last week as the Italian economy slowly reopens, said he would keep summer collection­s in stores until September — running counter to recent practice that put linen dresses in stores in winter and Alpaca coats in the summer.

The British Fashion Council and the Council of Fashion Designers of America have also endorsed resetting “the way in which we work and show our collection­s.” They encouraged brands “to slow down,” and reconsider how much merchandis­e they produce.

The Italian Fashion Chamber is promoting three days of online presentati­on of men’s and women’s collection­s in July to substitute the regular June calendar. Gucci will participat­e with a collection called “Epilogue,” to represent the end of an era.

When the fashion communicat­ion rebirth that Michele envisions will happen remains to be seen.

He said September is too soon, while Saint Laurent only said it wouldn’t participat­e in any previously scheduled events this year.

Fashion chamber president Carlo Capasa can’t say when live shows might return to the agenda — but he says they are irreplacea­ble.

“I believe that the digital experience is important, but it should be tied with a physical experience,” Capasa told AP. “Whoever has been to a fashion show knows the importance of the setting and the emotions.”

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 ??  ?? Kaia Gerber leads other models as they wear creations for the Saint Laurent fashion collection during Women’s fashion week Fall/ Winter 2020/21 presented in Paris.
Kaia Gerber leads other models as they wear creations for the Saint Laurent fashion collection during Women’s fashion week Fall/ Winter 2020/21 presented in Paris.
 ??  ?? In this September 2019 file photo, models wear creations as part of the Saint Laurent Ready To Wear Spring-Summer 2020 collection, unveiled during the Paris Fashion Week.
In this September 2019 file photo, models wear creations as part of the Saint Laurent Ready To Wear Spring-Summer 2020 collection, unveiled during the Paris Fashion Week.
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