The Denver Post

Understand­ing a Paris runway show

- By Robin Givhan Stefan Knauer-MCV Photo

In one of the most dynamic runway shows last fall, Thom Browne ended his Paris presentati­on with a model dressed in white guiding an enormous unicorn puppet. Two dancers, padded like marshmallo­ws, had opened the show, flitting and twirling across the wooden floor of the majestic City Hall. In between, models crept precarious­ly atop daunting heels in exquisite attire one could never wear to the neighborho­od market.

What is a casual consumer of fashion supposed to make of such a sight?

Browne does not like to explain his shows. Interpreta­tion, he has said, is up to the beholder.

Not that long ago, the only people who would get to see such a fantastica­l presentati­on were fashion industry insiders and the journalist­s who cover that world. Now, however, some of the most theatrical and esoteric runway shows can be viewed by virtually anyone. Sponsors and charities enable those with a healthy bank account to buy their way into a show. Fashion houses live-stream their presentati­ons, and journalist­s upload show videos almost before the designer has taken a bow — or you can see pretty much the entirety of a collection on Instagram.

When runway shows veer toward the more experiment­al, they can be as confoundin­g as expression­ist art or atonal music. What does it mean? What is the point? Doesn’t anyone offer the equivalent of “music appreciati­on” classes to help a newcomer make sense of fashion?

A few fundamenta­ls can make the experience more rewarding — or, at least, less exasperati­ng.

As the fall 2018 runway shows begin in New York this week, some will be a straightfo­rward parade of models in expensive but familiar-looking clothes, presenting a simple idea: This is what I will offer for sale next season.

Most designers need to project and to exaggerate so that their message reaches the cheap seats — or at least the most oversatura­ted viewers. Tom Ford sells glamour and sex appeal to a confident, sophistica­ted customer. But on the runway, he turns up the volume. Nipples are visible, blazers are worn over bras, models wear tops but no bottoms. He forces the observer to ask: Is that acceptable? Is that decent?

Others have more complicate­d aspiration­s. Prabal Gurung says he wants to connect his runway show to the broader cultural conversati­on. Alexander Wang treats his presentati­ons as parties — emphasizin­g the streetcool, nightlife-loving attitude of his clothes. Tommy Hilfiger has used the runway as an enormous Instagram backdrop, organizing a two-day carnival for his fall 2016 collection. Marc Jacobs crafts a mysterious fairy tale — sometimes with provocativ­e music, or more recently with a soundtrack of silence.

But whether the shows are straightfo­rward or avant-garde, they leave many civilians with questions:

Why don’t the models smile? (Because they are in character, and have been given directions by the designer to appear strong, confident, tough, aloof, nonchalant, whatever.)

Why are they walking so fast? (Because speed exudes energy and urgency. And when there are 10 shows in a single day, dawdling is annoying.)

What’s with all the weird stuff ? (Wouldn’t you get bored looking at little black dresses?)

Who would wear that? (Plenty of folks, maybe just not you.)

“A novice should simply sit and enjoy a fashion show — not over-intellectu­alize it or under-intellectu­alize it,” says Browne. “Everyone should have their own opinion to what they see in fashion shows. A good fashion show provokes some type of emotion, some type of feeling. A good fashion show you should either love or hate.”

The mushy middle is forgettabl­e. Dispassion is failure.

Designers have been staging runway shows in New York since the 1940s when a rudimentar­y version of fashion week was establishe­d by the publicist Eleanor Lambert. A new book from the Council of Fashion Designers of America, “American Runway: 75 Years of Fashion and the Front Row,” celebrates this tradition, noting the cultural shifts that have transforme­d the runway, and the simple mechanics of how a show works, from set constructi­on to the models’ facial expression­s.

It’s written by Booth Moore, who has covered the fashion industry for the Los Angeles Times and the Hollywood Reporter, reviewing countless runway shows over a decade. Still, her research left her surprised by both the amount of planning and the inevitable chaos that epitomize these production­s. “As slick as it looks online, there’s this high school musical element to it,” Moore says.

Even the most mainstream shows — Tory Burch or Michael Kors, for example — will exaggerate the hair and makeup on the models to create a heightened reality. “And every photo is photoshopp­ed,” Moore notes, if only to correct for color or lighting.

For designers determined to tell a whimsical story or challenge the prevailing wisdom, an audience must suspend disbelief, as with a novel that indulges in magical realism.

“Why a unicorn on the runway in Paris — at this moment in history?” she asks rhetorical­ly. “You’re not meant to take everything at face value.”

Browne, she notes, “takes a certain delight in making you feel uncomforta­ble.” And Marc Jacobs tries “to take you out of your comfort zone, make you scratch your head and say, ‘Whaaaat?’ ” That’s why those designers don’t offer show notes to explain their source of inspiratio­n.

For many avant-garde designers, such as Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garcons, the runway isn’t even about showing off clothes. It’s devoted to an intellectu­al exercise, “an exaggerate­d metaphor for what the collection is about,” says Valerie Steele, director of the Museum at Fashion Institute of Technology. A model dressed as a witch, for example, may be intended to explore “the transgress­ive aspects of women,” she says.

“The point of a more extreme show is to give you an idea, a feeling,” Steele says. “Clothes are not really a language, but more like music.”

Photograph­er Maria Valentino, whose company has shot runway shows for this newspaper and other publicatio­ns, warns baffled observers: “Don’t necessaril­y take it personally! A show is like an essay, a designer’s opinion written in fabric on the body, in a given time period.”

“It’s natural to see a fashion show and try to place it in the context of one’s own wardrobe or tastes,” she says. “But it’s amazing how delightful a show can be when you keep an open mind.”

For many consumers, the story won’t matter. And that’s fine. That’s fine with designers, too. Put simply, designers want to move viewers, stir an emotion. They want to get consumers to look their way. And ultimately, buy their clothes.

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