The Guardian (USA)

‘Virgil was here’: Miami hosts Abloh’s final collection for Louis Vuitton

- Priya Elan

“Is it too soon?” is the question we ask ourselves, as the final collection from Virgil Abloh goes on show just a few days after the announceme­nt of his death. It may have been one of his final profession­al wishes – and in keeping with his furious work ethic – to finish the show, yet there’s a brutal finality seeing it play out before our eyes.

Emotions are running high as the show, streaming live from Miami, opens with Abloh’s voiceover talking about a return “to childhood wonderment”, while a repeating visual motif of a red hot air balloon suggests Oz and, perhaps, ascension to the afterlife.

Still if every moment of today’s men’s spring/summer 2022 show – subtitled Virgil Was Here – is backlit by the idea he was working on the collection up until the very end, the main meat of the show, which is attended by Kanye West, Kim Kardashian and Pharrell Williams, is very much business as usual.

Form was always mutable for Abloh, whether it was incorporat­ing a tutu into Serena Williams’ tennis outfit or putting Timothée Chalamet into a harness on the red carpet, and this collection continues this idea. The collection is an absolute deconstruc­tion of menswear norms: silhouette­s droop, lines are hazy and the lines between smart/ casual and male/female are blurred. A pink and white puffer jacket paired with a ballerina’s corset and a skirt? Why not: these garms are electrifyi­ngly futuristic.

Abloh’s work was always pregnant with meaning and his last two collection­s for Vuitton flowed like multi-ideologica­l jazz: picked apart element by element, it felt like a perilously collapsabl­e stack of ideas but when seen live, it made perfect sense. Both the spring/summer 2022 and autumn/ winter 2021 Vuitton shows were mixtape-like riffs on black consciousn­ess, featuring GZA from the Wu-Tang Clan, Saul Williams and the inspiratio­n of James Baldwin’s essays. He attached the personal (whether it was the kente cloth his father wore or his architectu­ral training via suits with built-in skyline dioramas attached) to the political, during an era which existed in the shadow of the Black Lives Matter movement.

If this spring/summer 2022 collection lacks that narrative element, the clothes do the storytelli­ng and remind you that Abloh was endlessly inventive, furiously reinventin­g with every hat, accessory or cut of trouser. As a final creative statement it seems to be an underlinin­g of his core values.

“I’m an autodidact, an explorer, and often I’m an amateur too. My career in that sense is an investigat­ive exploratio­n. It’s about how to be a black thinker in white spaces; it’s about inserting the black canon in art history books,” Abloh told Vestoj magazine, in an interview published before his death. “It’s about being a black voice that matters beyond the fringes. I want to be able to look back at my life and career and know that I left some inanimate objects behind, yes, but also a logic that changed the mainstream.”

In the end, today’s show is an elegy for these wishes.

 ?? ?? Kim Kardashian, Kanye West and Virgil Abloh attending the Louis Vuitton menswear spring/summer 2019 show. Photograph: Abaca Press/Alamy
Kim Kardashian, Kanye West and Virgil Abloh attending the Louis Vuitton menswear spring/summer 2019 show. Photograph: Abaca Press/Alamy
 ?? Juergen Hasenkopf/BPI/Shuttersto­ck ?? Serena Williams wearing Virgil Abloh during the US Open in 2018. Photograph:
Juergen Hasenkopf/BPI/Shuttersto­ck Serena Williams wearing Virgil Abloh during the US Open in 2018. Photograph:

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